1. A Politics of Working-Class Culture and the Culture of Working-Class Politics: The Aesthetics and Activism of Amber Film and Photography Collective and the Berwick Street Film Collective.
- Author
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Boyall, Jessica
- Subjects
POLITICS & culture ,POLITICAL agenda ,PHOTOREALISM ,MIDDLE class ,FILMMAKING - Abstract
This paper examines how Amber Film and Photography Collective's working-class affiliations and Berwick Street Film Collective's middle-class makeup shaped their divergent approaches to depicting 'working-class issues' by drawing on the films of both collectives, alongside archival materials and oral testimonies. By engaging in a comparative reading, I highlight the breadth of Amber's oeuvre, tracing the development of their filmmaking strategies--which included agitprop, the fusion of factual and fictional formal elements and transnational collaboration with the German Democratic Republic's film production company, Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft (DEFA)--to demonstrate that, contrary to criticisms levelled by contemporary theorists clustered around Screen magazine and the British Film Institute, Amber transcended the constraints of Documentary Realism by incorporating radical avant-garde aesthetics into their oppositional practice. Concomitantly, Amber's radical filmmaking is positioned as relative to its members' working-class solidarities, with their concern for championing working-class cultures contrasted with Berwick Street's broader political agendas. Through foregrounding this politics/culture dialectic, the practical repercussions of Berwick Street's middle-class representation of 'working-class interests' are investigated while the theoretical criteria by which avant-garde depictions of 'working-class issues' are evaluated are themselves assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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