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Flickering Shadows: Cinema and Identity in Colonial Zimbabwe (Africa Series, No 77)

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Title: Flickering Shadows: Cinema and Identity in Colonial Zimbabwe (Africa Series, No 77)
by James McDonald Burns, Peter Davis
ISBN: 0-89680-224-8
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Pub. Date: 01 May, 2002
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $28.00
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Average Customer Rating: 5 (1 review)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Why Not a Movie?
Comment: As a student of Sub-Saharan Africa I found this history of British Empire propaganda efforts through cinema showings in Rhodesia fascinating reading. This is the stuff of great drama -- the British investment in moving picture development and censorship efforts directed at forging a "tool of Empire" in order to pacify Africans and assimilate them into the new colonial order. Most of othe propaganda tools later employed by the Nazis in Germany and the Soviets in Russia were originally in play in the prolonged and heavily subsidized business of developing a cinema oriented to promoting the white rule administrations. The book is a fast paced, engrossing read -- if there is one criticism to be levied it seems that perhaps in the interest of brevity the author passed over quickly some of the engrossing tales of how certain motion pictures were required to be bowdlerized in order to negotiate them into a colonial atmosphere. For example, a full chapter might have been devoted to the reaction of the Rhodesian natives to cowboy movies, a campaign that stretched over decades, changing in scope and intent to accommodate the growing sophistication of the native audiences. Has anyone made an attempt to produce a motion picture not centered in the Hollywood concept of African colonialism? Perhaps the author has this in mind for a future project -- I would look forward to watching a drama concerned with Rhodesian cinema development in a style of "Out of Africa" presentation, demonstrating the power of film to shape credulous audiences, and how that same influence backfired in fomenting political unrest and revolution.

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