The Cinema of Apartheid: Race and Class in South African Film

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Routledge, Dec 13, 2013 - Performing Arts - 304 pages

This study analyses the historical development of South African cinema up to he book's original publication in 1988. It describes the films and comments on their relationship to South African realities, addressing all aspects of the industry, focusing on domestic production, but also discussing international film companies who use South Africa as a location. It explores tensions between English-language and Afrikaans-language films, and between films made for blacks and films made for whites.

Going behind the scenes the author looks at the financial infrastructure, the marketing strategies, and the works habits of the film industry. He concludes with a discussion of independent filmmaking, the obstacles facing South Africans who want to make films with artistic and political integrity, and the possibilities of progress in the future.

Includes comprehensive bibliography and filmography listing all feature films made in South Africa between 1910 and 1985 together with documentary films by South Africans, non-South Africans, and exiles about the country.

 

Contents

Introduction
9
1 Censorship
13
2 Control by Subsidy
29
3 Films for Blacks
53
4 Film Movements
83
5 The Reviewer Syndrome
95
6 Film Critics
109
7 Marketing a Product
139
9 Esthetic Labor
179
10 Independent Cinema
195
11 Social Polarization
215
Notes
231
Bibliography
243
19101985
261
Selected Documentary Films
271
Index
279

8 Distribution
159

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About the author (2013)

Keyan Tomaselli

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