Gray, Ros, 2012, Journal Article, Cinema on the cultural front: Filmmaking and the Mozambican revolution Journal of African Cinemas, 3 (2). ISSN 17549221
Abstract or Description: | This article, for a special issue on lusophone African cinemas, analyses how, during the armed struggle and the revolution that followed independence in Mozambique, filmmaking was understood as operating on the ‘cultural front’ of an international struggle against capitalist imperialism. Shortly after independence in 1975, The Mozambique Liberation Front (FRELIMO) established an Instituto Nacional de Cinema (INC), and Maputo became a key site in a network of African liberationist filmmaking that had been emerging since the late 1960s. Gray argues that in a country in which most of the population had no prior experience of the moving image, cinema offered FRELIMO the possibility of mobilising around a new identity based on revolutionary nationalism, and teaching the Mozambican people about how the radical transformations of decolonisation connected them to other peoples struggling for emancipation across the world. |
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Subjects: | Creative Arts and Design > W600 Cinematics and Photography > W630 History of Cinematics and Photography |
Identification Number or DOI: | 10.1386/jac.3.2.139_1 |
Date Deposited: | 25 Oct 2013 19:00 |
Last Modified: | 09 Nov 2018 15:45 |
URI: | https://rca-9.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/1452 |
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