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- Convenors:
-
Frances Wilkins
(University of Aberdeen)
Brenna Shay Quinton (University of Aberdeen)
Mary Stratman (Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen)
Send message to Convenors
- Chair:
-
Frances Wilkins
(University of Aberdeen)
- Format:
- Film
- Location:
- Film room
- Sessions:
- Thursday 5 June, -
Time zone: Europe/London
Short Abstract:
The Society for International Ethnology and Folklore invites film submissions to be screened or presented during its 17th Congress, which will be held in Aberdeen, Scotland from the 3rd to the 6th of June 2025.
Long Abstract:
For the film programme, we encourage submissions that engage with the process of unwriting, challenge hegemonic frameworks which limit us to predetermined paths and casually accepted paradigms. Ethnologists, folklorists, cultural and social anthropologists, and representatives of related disciplines (e.g. urban planning, architecture, design) and institutions (museums, archives, etc.), as well as filmmakers and other artists (e.g., photographers, sound designers) are encouraged to submit film proposal for screening and discussion during the conference.
Accepted films:
Session 7Film short abstract:
The film tells the story of three groups of Sufi music, Mediterranean fusion and rap, who accept the challenge of the ethnographer-filmmaker of producing each one an auto-reflexive and collaborative music video.
Film long abstract:
The film tells the story of three groups of Sufi music, Mediterranean fusion and rap, who accept the challenge of the ethnographer-filmmaker of producing each one a videoclip. Not a conventional one, but an auto-reflexive, ethnographically based music video: an audiovisual product which is the result of several collaborative and creative sessions, and whose production is an occasion for exploring the relation the bands have with the place where they live and with the echoes that its Andalusí past has left. Trying to translate their musical worlds into moving images, Al Firdaus, Darash and Pablo López deal with the reflections of Al Ándalus in contemporary Andalusia.
Title (original): | Videomusicando Al Ándalus |
Duration (in minutes): | 48 |
Language(s): | Spanish and English |
Director(s): | Dario Ranocchiari |
Producer/Production company: | Fondazione Giorgio Cini and Universidad de Granada |
Film short abstract:
The old makua Mame Keray, nowadays a Tanzanian citizen after having escaped from Somalia as refugee twenty years earlier, observes the performance of the sharappa dance in the village close to where she used to live. The dance helps her recalling the spirits of the ancestors and a past of slavery.
Film long abstract:
The old Somali Makua Mame Keray , became citizen of Tanzania after having escaped from the war in her country in 1992; has the chance to watch on a computer the performance of the Sharappa dance shot in the village close where she used to live in Somalia. She sees the old man leader of the Makua group in Somalia, she watches her now dead sister dancing, she cries and express what the dance means for her. Her nephew describes the meaning she gives to the dance she performed to heal from the trauma of been raped during the war in Somalia
The Sharappa Makua dance reproduces memories of ancestors involving wellbeing rituals. Elements of this matrilineal Makua dance performed in Somalia show that practice interconnected with the ancestors cults has been crucial to the identity of forced migrant people in East Africa. The Makua dance Shalipa fro mMozambique is videoed and compared with the Somali Makua on. People living in maroon societies in Somalia but whose origins were from the Nyasa, Yao, Zigua, Makua of nowadays Mozambique, Malawi and Tanzania elicit the crucial role of the dances as identity in times of forced migrations when societies were totally based on oral traditions.
This documentary dedicated to the specific Makua dance the author videotaped first in Somalia, later in Tanzania and, finally, in Mozambique synthesises a long research journey that brought the anthropologist to accompany refugees in several countries following along several decades the thread of the matrilineal ceremonies.
Title (original): | The call of the ancestors across countries. Features of matriliny in East Africa |
Duration (in minutes): | 25 |
Language(s): | English, Italian, Zigula |
Director(s): | Francesca Declich |
Producer/Production company: | Self produced |