Showing posts with label OTHER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OTHER. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Does a study of the history of ethnographic film reveal a tension between creativity and naturalism?

‘Say, rare Machine, who taught thee to design? / And mimick Nature with such Skill divine’ (anonymously authored poem in praise of the camera obscura, 1747).

Does a study of the history of ethnographic film reveal a tension between creativity and naturalism?

The camera’s ability for representation has been an area of critique in the history of documentary filmmaking. What is real and what is constructed? Are truth and reality the same thing? Can one construct truth? With regards specifically to ethnographic film, this paper will focus on its crucial formative years and, within this period, chronologically trace its development from the first footage of ethnographic interest in 1895 to the radical challenges to documentary leading towards its technical and theoretical modernisation in 1960. I will argue, using film examples, that there has been an ever present tension between creativity and naturalism and that the reason for this tension has come from (1) filmmaking technology’s possibilities and limits, and (2) the social context that influence the filmmaker’s decisions.

In 1895, Felix-Louis Regnault visited the Exposition Ethnographique de l’Afrique Occidentale in Paris. Like a zoo, they consisted of constructed sets marked off by a fence where ‘exotic’ people would seemingly conduct their everyday activities for the pleasure of Europeans who sometimes threw them money. Most importantly, it was considered rude or inappropriate for the Other to return the gaze. This meant that Europeans ‘were free to define, categorize, and label their subjects with impunity’ (Chapman 2009: 98). Reganult’s camera visually recorded ethnographic subjectivity for the very first time, and in Paris subjectivity happened to be at its most extreme, because what Regnault captured was not a skilled pot-making Wolof woman but the power relationship of the colonial era aligned with normative ideas of social evolutionism. Thus the story of ethnographic film begins with its most creative work, not because of its coercive out of place performance in a constructed set, but because of the 1895 ‘creative’ mentality of the viewer. Naturalism it was not.

Left: Sketch of Regnault’s destroyed footage of Wolof woman (SPLA n.d).

Right: Example of exposition poster, Lyon, 1894 (Libèration n.d.).

In 1898, Alfred Cort Haddon led a holistic Cambridge expedition of seven – whose professional roles covered anthropology, ethnology, zoology, neurology, psychiatry, psychology, linguistics, musicology, and photography – to the Torres Strait. Aligning themselves to the natural sciences, Haddon’s positivist generation saw the camera as their equivalent to a microscope or telescope which could visually apprehend material culture  such  as  dress,  technology,  and  architecture  and  overcome  the  objective problem of their discipline (Torresan n.d.). For the first time, the camera was taken into the field for salvage ethnography. However, not yet accustomed to developing technology, Haddon’s 35mm Newman and Guardia camera often jammed, spoiling the film. It was also too big and the film stock too sensitive to be able to move around in the manner now associated with realist documentary. Thus due to the limits of both early technology and the lack of knowledge of how best to take advantage of it, what is produced is, like Regnault’s piece, a performance, although there is at least collaboration between Haddon and the Malo (Eaton 2010).

Malo ceremonial dance in Haddon’s Torres Strait Islanders (The Bioscope 2010).

In the early 20th  century, filmmaking failed in anthropology. Firstly, there was the practical difficulties of taking cameras into the field, and secondly, a new way of anthropological thought arose that focused on the invisible structures that held society together, like kinship and politics over material culture. With academia’s obstacles, the ethnographic film void was filled by commercial enterprise.

In 1912, Gaston Méliès family company Star Film, producer of special-effects films such A Trip to the Moon (1902), travelled to Tahiti and New Zealand to capture authentic locations set within fictional stories or documentaires romances. Visual anthropologist scholar, de Brigard (1975: 19) is critical:

Apart  from  entertainment,  what is the value  of nonscientific  films  of peoples  and customs?...Human behaviour in documentary and fiction films is subject to directorial distortion to such an extent that the film may be scientifically  worthless. However, authenticity can be found on levels untouched by dramatic action.

According to de Brigard (1975: 19), a film that demonstrates such authenticity is Edward Curtis’s 1914 film In the Land of the Head Hunters (aka In the Land of the War Canoes) shot in the Pacific Northwest. Although, to state this film is ‘untouched by dramatic action’ would be false. The film does depict many authentic elements such as artwork, architecture, dance, costume, rituals, and the use of local people as actors; however, it is again weaved into a fictional plot which, in de Brigard’s own
words (1975: 19), ‘concerns a wicked sorcerer, a hero, and their respective factions battling for a girl’. Melodramatic scenes are clearly staged with de Brigard (1975: 19) even commenting that ‘Curtis had learned the same lessons as D. W. Griffiths [Hollywood filmmaking pioneer], and he handled suspense well’. For de Brigard (1975: 19), her praise seems to be directed at the hard work put in by Curtis to capture his subjects.

The photographers  of the Indian  were  not trained  anthropologists,  but the best  of them  did  their  work  with  enthusiasm,  extraordinary  dedication,  and  sensitivity. Curtis, a prolific stills photographer, spent three seasons with the Kwakiutl filming a drama   of  love  and  war  in  settings   painstakingly   reconstructed   for  precontact authenticity.

Here, I must state that it is important not confuse reconstructed authenticity (however painstaking it was to recreate) with authenticity itself, but I can understand de Brigard’s appreciation for the ‘authentic’ scenes being depicted and the ethnographic value of Curtis’s footage to anthropologists. This tension between creativity and naturalism would continue in the commercial sector with arguably the most famous ethnographic film released eight years later in a seminal year for anthropology.

Dramatic scenes from Curtis’s In the Land of the Head Hunters (Canadian Heritage Film Festival n.d.).

In   1922,   both   Robert   Flaherty’s   film   Nanook   of   the   North   and   Bronislaw Malinowski’s  monograph  Argonauts  of  the  Western  Pacific  were  released.  Both raised the bar in their field and shared common ideas. Malinowski promoted focus on the ‘imponderabilia of everyday life’; Flaherty filmed mundane activities such as eating and sleeping. Malinowski sought the ‘native’s point of view’; Flaherty collaborated with Nanook by showing him new footage and receiving his comments (Loizos 1993: 13). Malinowski moved away from the dominant social evolutionist theory; Flaherty moved away from the dominant adventure and romance storyline. Malinowski  promoted  extensive  stays  in  the  field  and  participant  observation; Flaherty spent several years working and filming in the area and spent one year filming the actual footage released. Malinowski promoted native language learning; Flaherty  was  already  familiar  with  the  language  (Marks  1995:  340).  Flaherty, although not an anthropologist, was certainly an adept filmmaker and pushed the look of naturalism in ethnographic film. However, this realism comes under scrutiny when one investigates behind the scenes. For example, Nanook isn’t his real name, and the family isn’t his family; Nanook hunted with guns rather than spears as depicted in the film; Nanook knew what a gramophone was, contrary to the film; the interior igloo scene was shot in a constructed three-wall igloo set; Nanook battled against an off- camera person in the rope pulling scene, rather than a seal as edited (Rothman 1997, Barnouw 1993, Ebert 2005, Leacock 1990). With this in mind, notions of naturalism clearly weaken. Anthropologist and filmmaker Timothy Asch agrees: ‘…the film was scripted. Flaherty used Eskimos as actors playing their own roles and in that sense created a prototype for feature narrative films rather than documentary films’ (Crawford and Turton 1992: 196). From this statement, Asch might also agree with my own thoughts that the film should be considered strictly under the hybrid fiction/non-fiction genre of ethnofiction or docudrama and not ‘documentary’ as reflected in the categorisation and reviews on popular Internet websites such Wikipedia, IMDb, and Amazon. However, Hollywood film critic Roger Ebert (2005) is more sympathetic:

“Nanook” is not cinema verite. And yet in a sense it is: The movie is an authentic documentary  showing the creation of itself. What happens on the screen is real, no matter  what  happened  behind  it…It  has  an  authenticity  that  prevails  over  any complaints  that some of the sequences  were staged.  If you stage a walrus hunt [a

separate  scene to the one with the seal], it still involves hunting a walrus, and the walrus hasn’t seen the script. What shines through is the humanity and optimism of the Inuit.

Both Asch and Ebert’s comments are valid but whereas Asch, the anthropologist, is looking for scientific authenticity, Ebert, the commercial cinemagoer, wants authentic emotion. This tension has arisen through two reasons. The first – the influence of technology – is evident from the hand cranked 35mm Bell & Howell camera that limited Flaherty to the tripod and thus necessitated staging but with the new Akeley Gyro head it enabled him to pan and tilt, which became a Flaherty trademark. Richard Leacock  (1990:  1),  a  documentary  filmmaker  and  Flaherty’s  once  cameraman, explains the three-walled igloo: ‘The photographic emulsions were slow by contemporary standards, hence the absolute need to construct an igloo which was open on one side to let daylight in and afford room to set up the tripod’. The second reason – the social context (in Flaherty’s case commercialism) – is evident from Flaherty’s decision to sacrifice absolute reality for entertainment. Leacock (n.d.) recognises this: ‘When these films were made there was only one place to show films and that was in commercial cinemas. There were no film clubs, no film schools, no television. The cinemas were run, in most cases, by the big movie producers and they were run for profit’. Leacock (1990) explains the rope fight:

Both the Flahertys [Robert and his wife Frances] were acutely aware that after the almost miraculous success of Nanook, they still faced the same problem in their subsequent  films.  This is why there  are sequences  in all the films  except  Moana, which  was  a  bust  at  the  box  office,  that  in  my  view  are  “crowd  pleasers”.  The struggle between Nanook and the seal at opposite ends of a rope. The same sequence with Tiger King and the basking shark and then again in Louisiana Story with the boy and the alligator. These served as comic relief, no more, no less. In all these scenes there were some sturdy fellows at the other end of the rope.

These early 20th  century ethnographic films must be put in the social context of commercial   filmmaking.   These   filmmakers   had   no   obligation   to   represent ethnographic subjects in the scientific or sensitive way that an anthropologist would. In defence of his old employer and friend, Leacock (1990) continues: ‘Cheating? This

accusation implies that Flaherty had claimed that his films were pure “observation”. This is not so. Flaherty was making “movies” to be shown in Theaters along with the hokum coming out of the studios.’ In the most straightforward argument for the rights of creativity over naturalism in early ethnographic film, Leacock (1990) simply states

‘Robert Flaherty never claimed to be an Anthropologist’.

Left : Nanook attempts to eat the gramophone record in Rouch’s Nanook of the North (True Films 2004).

Right: One-man crew of Flaherty films Nanook in precarious conditions (Quintero 2011).

Between  1922,  the  year  Nanook  was  released,  till  1925,  a  different  style  of filmmaking happened in Russia. Dziga Vertov, directing the Kino-Pravda newsreel series, meaning ‘cinema truth’, combined the naturalism of the first cinèmatograph actuality films by the Lumières’ in 1895 with the technical creativity that D. W. Griffith pioneered with his 1915 Hollywood film Birth of a Nation to create what one would call today social documentary. Documentary scholars Ellis and McLane (2005:

28)  describe  Vertov’s  ethos:  ‘His  iconoclasm  was  intended  to  free  film  from bourgeois obfuscation of story and the effete pleasures of theatrical performance in order to arrive at the truths of the actual world’. In 1929, influenced by the films in Russia, John Grierson’s Drifters filmed the workers of a North Sea fishing trawler and started the British Documentary Film Movement and its ‘creative treatment of actuality’ (de Brigard 1975: 25). For both Vertov, being a young man in a new Communist Russia, and Grierson, being raised in a household supporting the poor and

the labour movement (Evans 2005), there are certainly parallels between their left- wing ideologies and their representational and uncensored style of filmmaking, which would in turn influence fiction films most notably in post-Fascist Italy in the form of Italian neorealism and the French and British New Wave in the late 1950s and 1960s. For anthropologists, this socially influenced shift towards naturalistic filmmaking in the  1920s  was  important  because  it  was  filmmaking’s  first  major  turn  towards minimal stagecraft.

Left: Newsreel showing the underprivileged in Vertov’s Kino-Pravda 1

(Germanwarfilms.com n.d.).

Right: Trawlermen at work in Grierson’s Drifters (University of Stirling Archives 2011).

Between 1936-1938, Bateson and Mead’s film work in Bali and New Guinea differed from others in two aspects. Firstly, they were anthropologists whose intentions were strictly for scientific research. Bateson explains: ‘We tried to use the still and the moving picture cameras to get a record of Balinese behaviour, and this is a very different matter from the preparation of a “documentary” film or photographs’ (Bateson and Mead 1942: 49). Secondly, they used the new 16mm Movikon camera (Jacknis 1988), instead of the heavier and more expensive 35mm. This allowed Bateson, the technician of the pair, more freedom to capture everyday naturalist behaviour. ‘We tried to shoot what happened normally and spontaneously, rather than to decide upon the norms and then get the Balinese to go through these behaviours in suitable lighting’ (Bateson and Mead 1942: 49). One issue that came out of their visual ethnography was the need to find balance between science and humanity, with Mead leaning on the side of the objective former, and Gregory the subjective latter. Mead, like Haddon and the early anthropologists, believed in the neutrality of the camera, envisioning that anthropologists could leave a filming camera in the middle of a village and return later to empirically analyse the data. Bateson disagreed and thought a mobile anthropologist was needed to engage in all aspects of life with the subject. The difference in their objective/subjective opinion remained throughout their lives and is evident from a 1976 discussion where in the following extract, Bateson has just argued that filming should not be on a tripod but handheld (Askew and Wilk 2002: 42-43):

Mead : And therefore you’ve introduced variation into it that is unnecessary. Bateson : I therefore got the information out that I thought was relevant at the time.

Mead : That’s right. And therefore what do you see later? [Referring to an earlier comment about altered material becoming unscientific.]

Bateson : If you put the damn thing on a tripod, you don’t get any relevance. Mead : No, you get what happened.

Bateson: It isn’t what happened.

(Several short exchanges later)

Bateson: If  Stewart  [the  interviewer]  reached  behind  his  back  to  scratch himself, I would like to be over there at that moment.

Mead: If you were over there at that moment you wouldn’t see him kicking the cat under the table. So that just doesn’t hold as an argument.

Bateson: Of  the  things  that  happen,  the  camera  is  only  going  to  record  1 percent anyway.

Mead: That’s right.


Bateson: I want that 1 percent on the whole to tell.

The most important part of this discussion comes from Bateson and the acknowledgement of his own subjectivity.

Bateson: …I think the photographic record should be an art form.

Mead: Oh  why?  Why  shouldn’t  you  have  some  records  that  aren’t  art forms? Because if it’s an art form, it has been altered.

Bateson: It’s undoubtedly been altered. I don’t think it exists unaltered.

This acceptance of the inevitable altering filmmaker is an early sign of the reflexivity that would later become a concern in its textual counterpart in the 1970s and 1980s, most notably with the publication of Writing Culture (1986). Jacknis (1988: 171) writes ‘Research involving human subjects attain objectivity not by ignoring the role of the observer, but by explicitly considering it as part of the investigation,’ and continues (1988: 173) ‘Bateson and Mead’s work was ahead of its time’. This reflexivity  or  ‘disciplined  subjectivity’  –  an  appropriate,  more  conservative  term given by their daughter Mary Catherine Bateson (1984: 163) – was indeed supported by Mead (1968:15-16), with the last line highlighting the delicate balance needed between the innate creativity of subjectivity and the naturalism of objectivity:

There  is  no  such  thing  as  an  unbiased  report  upon  any  social  situation…It  is comparable to a color-blind man reporting on a sunset. All of our recent endeavors in the social sciences have been to remove bias, to make the recording so impersonal and thereby  meaningless  that neither  emotion  nor scientific  significance  remained. Actually in matters of ethos, the surest and most perfect instrument of understanding is our own emotional response, provided that we can make a disciplined use of it.

However, Bateson and Mead’s academic work isn’t without its creative faults. In Trance and Dance (1951) two separate dances, one shot in December 1937 and the other in February 1939 (Jacknis 1988: 171), were edited and presented as one. Going further, John Marshall’s much-acclaimed The Hunters (1958) constructed a two-week story from several years of footage. In particular, the film’s set piece of a long, single hunt is actually from several ventures, whilst the hunters themselves are occasionally interchanged with other similar looking people (Heider 1976: 35, Loizos 1993: 22). Loizos (1993: 22) explains the medium’s technical limitations for presenting narrative precision:

Many writers have noted that because of the way film is typically edited, it tends to create  the  illusion  of  single  continuous   event  unless  we  are  deliberately   told otherwise,  because  at  the  level  of  images  it  lacks  the  grammatical   qualifying adjectives  ‘some’ ‘most’ ‘many’ ‘all’ (Metz 1974, Nichols 1981). With the simple

insertion of such terms writers can move back and forth between the general and the particular, but in film these issues are much harder to manage.

Left: The camera records the child’s fear and jealousy, illustrating Mead’s research in

Childhood Rivalry in Bali and New Guinea (PACE n.d.).

Right: Bateson on one knee as he films handheld from the Iatmul child’s eye level in New

Guinea, 1938 (Community Manager 2010).

In  1946,  travelling  down  the  Niger  river,  one  person  would  avoid  such  creative pitfalls by, instead, embracing them in his search for truth. Frenchman Jean Rouch, like Bateson and Mead, was fortunate to be an anthropologist working with a smaller

16mm Bell & Howell camera (de Brigard 1975), but added to this would be four more technical factors that would lead Rouch to create a groundbreaking style of documentary. Firstly, early in his project, his tripod went overboard and forced Rouch to fully adopt a handheld shooting style (de Brigard 1975, Cousins and Macdonald

1996: 264). Secondly, new 16mm film stock that required less light emerged. Thirdly, portable synchronous sound recorders, such as Rouch’s Nagra, was developed. And fourthly, by 1960, Rouch and his cameraman Michel Brault had constructed the even lighter and silent (so as not to be heard by the sound recorder) KMT Coultant-Mathot

16mm camera whose slimline body could be placed over the shoulder; this would be the prototype for the popular Éclair camera.

Rouch handling an over-the-shoulder Éclair camera (DER n.d.).

All four factors freed the camera to become more spontaneous and mobile, in particular in accessing small, quiet, and low-light environments like the informal and imitate privacy of someone’s home. The development in synchronised sound that we take for granted today also allowed subjects to speak for themselves instead of having the filmmaker’s voice-over like in Mead and Bateson’s work or Marshall’s The Hunters, which now draws criticism for its omniscient narration (Aitken 2006: 384); sync sound would also push towards the mainstream use of subtitles (Loizis 1973: 11,

13). French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard wrote that in Rouch’s seminal psycho-sociological  film  Chronique  d’un  été  (1960,  co-directed  with  sociologist Edgar Morin) set in Paris, it ‘was the first time I heard a worker speak in a movie’ (Di Iorio 2013). As a result of these technical advances, Rouch managed to capture an unprecedented degree of naturalism and humanity in his subjects.

Although Rouch’s filmmaking style can be traced to these moments of mechanical liberation, his deeper ethos was influenced by the social context. In the years towards the decolonialisation of West Africa by France and Britain, Rouch was interested in Europe ‘decolonising themselves’ (Stoller 1992, Loizos 1973) through subverting European understanding of West Africa on topics like magic, urban migration, and racial attitudes. In essence, he aimed to return Regnault’s gaze, and most notably he did so with the humorous ‘reverse anthropology’ of Petit à Petit (1970) where a Nigerien flies to Paris to study their culture.

Damouré conducts measurements on Parisians for his ‘ethnology diploma’ in Rouch’s Petit à

Petit (Encounters n.d.).

Technically inspired by the urban hardship naturalistically depicted by Vertov and Italian neorealism, and philosophically inspired by the creative artist/subject relationship’s ploy for truth of Flaherty and Surrealist paintings (Bregstein 1986), Rouch combined them to create cinéma vérité, a filmmaking style committed to depicting truth through self-reflexivity and, in particular, the extreme acknowledgement of the subjective presence of the camera. Like Flaherty’s Nanook, Rouch’s films are what he himself called ‘ethnofiction’, only he stretched the tension between creativity and naturalism so far that, to viewers, fiction and reality seemed to circle round and blur into each other.

Three innovative truth-seeking tactics stand out in Rouch’s films that produce the grey area between creativity and naturalism. The first tactic is provocation via the

‘observer effect’ with the camera and filmmaker as an ‘active agent’ (Loizos 1993:


46) leading subjects into situations and emotions that could reveal a truth that would otherwise lie dormant. La pyramide humaine (1959) begins with Rouch recruiting a group of white students for his film about black-white relations but warns that ‘some of you will have to be the racists’. In the Chronique d’un été café table scene, Rouch creatively guides the natural discussion to caress out truths about people’s fears, prejudices, beliefs, and ignorance. Rouch explains:

When you have a microphone and when you have a camera aimed at people, there is, all of a sudden, a phenomenon  that takes place because people are being recorded: they behave very differently  than they would if they were not being recorded. But what has always seemed very strange to me is that, contrary to what one might think, when people are being recorded, the reactions that they have are always more sincere than those they have when they are not being recorded. The fact of being recorded gives these people a public. (Cousins and Macdonald 1996: 269)

Left: Young black-white friendships and romances are explored in Rouch’s La pyramide humaine (Álvarez 2009).

Right: Guided by Rouch, Parisians speak frankly about race in Rouch and Morin’s Chronique d’un été (Blondesearch n.d.).

The second tactic is collaboration, or the egalitarian ‘shared anthropology’ approach of giving ‘voice’, with the subjects as unofficial co-technicians, co-writers, co- directors, and informant-feedback commentators who mould the ethnographic film into a collective truth, becoming the precursor to indigenous filmmaking. In Moi, un noir (1957), the subject is also the film’s informal voice-over narrator. This replaces the traditional tightly scripted, all-seeing, all-knowing commentary of the filmmaker, or ‘voice of God’ (Loizos 1993: 12), and it addresses historic power relations in ethnographic film. In Chronique d’un été, the subjects are allowed to watch footage of themselves as Rouch films their different critical, defensive, protesting, and praiseful responses. Rouch explains the relationship between such a collaboration and new technology:

New techniques and equipment [allow] you to make feedback during the next visit to the  people  and  work  on  the  film  with  the  people,  which  is  very  important.  For example, now you can use small Super-8mm projectors and you need only a small Honda electrical generator to project the film where you want…Going back, stop on a frame,  going  back…collecting   information  that  would  be  impossible  to  collect without these tools. It's impossible to stop the priest or the Pope while he is saying his mass and say, ‘Why are you going from the right to the other part of the alter with this book.’ But, you can do it if you show the Pope or the priest the film — he can say [why he's] there. (Johnson 1978)

Left: The subject, Edward G. Robinson, looks directly at the camera and via voice-over introduces the viewer to his suburb in Rouch’s Moi, un noir (De Película n.d.).

Right: Subjects watch themselves in a cinema and offer opinions in Rouch and Morin’s

Chronique d’un été (The Metropolis Times 2012).

The third tactic – which also falls under ‘shared anthropology’ but which differs in the way truth is excavated – is improvisation by the subjects who perform a role that is a variation of themselves so as to attempt to uncover a subconscious or off-the- record personal truth behind the surface layer of everyday formality. In Moi, un noir the  subjects  take  on  ‘characters’  they  aspire  to  be  like  and  perform  this  role throughout the film revealing through their improvisation their own possible aspirations and frustrations in life. Documentary filmmaker and scholar Howes (1982:

28) praises the protagonist: ‘He expresses himself freely, improvising a dialogue which strikes one as overpowering in its honesty, intimacy and poignancy’. In the

standout scene of Chronique d’un été, Marceline’s improvisation powerfully morphed with her true memories of Jewish deportation with her father. She would later explain:

My truth is not in this film even though the memories of deportation which I evoked are real; and that is where all the ambiguity of cinema-verité exists, even if I thought about that scene in advance before shooting and it was a question of me finding ‘the tone’, but my truth in this sequence  is there because I had really lived what I was talking about. (Rouch and Morin 1962 in Loizos 1993: 63)

Left: A reflective scene allowing the character ‘Edward G. Robinson’ to reveal the subject

Oumarou Ganda in Rouch’s Moi, un noir (Losada 2010).

Right: Marceline painfully improvising as the camera follows from an unobtrusive distance in

Rouch and Morin’s Chronique d’un été (Images de Cinéma 2007).

Supporters of Rouch like Loizos (1993: 54) write ‘there is a real case for saying that by…“improvising” and “provoking” Rouch offered us something which perhaps comes closer to the truth than a stilted “film of record” might have done’. However, de Brigard (1975: 28) writes that his work has been described by some as ‘inveterate amateurism’ and ‘incurable dilettantism’, whilst Richard Leacock and the Direct Cinema movement across the Atlantic argued against Rouch’s provocative style and thought that the ‘fly on the wall’, non-intervention approach could better present objective truth: ‘We find that the degree to which the camera changes the situation is mostly due to the nature of the person filming it. You can make your presence known, or you can act in such a way as not to affect them’ (Cousins and Macdonald 1996:

257). Here, Leacock switches the power of presence from camera to filmmaker; however, I would argue that unless the subject was unaware they were being filmed, then the camera, no matter how hidden the filmmaker, still retains its power. The importance of Rouch to ethnographic film, then, is not the filmmaker’s provocative and collaborative tactics for truth per se, but rather his acknowledgement of the camera as a powerful, deforming, non-objective instrument that his tactics serve to convey.

In conclusion, from 1895 to the 1920s, anthropologists were hindered by the physical and economic difficulty in ethnographic filmmaking as well as the discipline’s analytical turn from the positivist study of material culture to the abstract study of invisible structures (e.g. Regnault’s Wolof women in Paris, Haddon’s Torres Strait expedition), subsequently this left the space for commercial films to depict ethnographic subjects (e.g. Méliès’s documentaires romances, Curtis’s In the Land of the Head- Hunters, Flaherty’s Nanook of the North). In the 1920s, left-wing social movements led to the creation of realist social documentary (e.g. Vertov’s Kino- Pravda, Grierson’s Drifters). In the 1930s, the smaller and lighter 16mm camera provided greater filmmaking freedom, and the refocus on scientific research raised questions over filmmaker objectivity/subjectivity and highlighted the notion of reflexivity to anthropology (e.g. Bateson and Mead’s research in Bali and New Guinea). In the 1950s, Rouch’s naturalistic handheld 16mm filmmaking style complimented the creative truth-seeking ethos of cinéma vérité and its active agency. Fundamentally, Rouch opposed the empiricist theoretical ideas of Haddon, Vertov, and Mead by not believing the camera to be an objective truth-telling machine, but instead he heavily built on the collaborative work of Flaherty and the reflexive thoughts of Bateson to find his truth (it would take at least another decade before anthropologists working in the textual medium publicly questioned their own systematic biases in the construction of their written ethnographies, at least in the USA). Beyond 1960, innovations in technology – e.g. wireless mics, cheaper and user-friendly video and DV cameras, digital editing, and Youtube – and changing social contexts – e.g. increased academic interest in ethnographic films (e.g. the 1968 formation of Documentary Educational Resources, which produced Asch and Chagnon’s 1975 The Ax Fight with its pedagogic presentation of a single, continuous

‘sequence’),   emergence   of   ethno-entertainment   television   programmes   (e.g. Granada’s Disappearing World 1969-1993 series), new post-structuralist anthropological theory (Loizos 1993: 12), increased ethnographic film writing (e.g. Ruby 1975, Heider 1976, Nichols 1981), indigenous filmmaking (e.g. Worth and Adair’s Navajo Film Themselves 1966 series), and experimental filmmaking (e.g. Gardner’s Dead Birds 1963 and Forest of Bliss 1985) – all continued to shape and challenge the definition of ethnographic films.

As stated at the top of this essay, there has indeed been a tension back-and-forth between   creativity   and   naturalism   not   only   in   the   chronological   history   of ethnographic films but, more importantly, within individual films themselves. As outlined above, this tension was born from, firstly, the possibilities and limitations of technology and, secondly, the social context. From 1895 to 1960, this tension reached its pinnacle in the subversive films of Jean Rouch who taught future ethnographic filmmakers the importance reflexivity and future ethnographic film viewers the importance of scepticism.

References

Book and articles

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Askew, Kelly and Richard R. Wilk (eds.) (2002) The anthropology of media: a reader. Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

Barnouw, Erik (1993) Documentary: A history of the non-fiction film. Oxford: Oxford

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Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1942) Balinese character: A photographic analysis. New York: Academy of Sciences.

Bateson, Mary Catherine (1984) With a daughter’s eye: A memoir of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson. New York: William Morrow.

Crawford, Peter Ian and David Turton (eds.) (1992) Film as ethnography. Reprint, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000.

Chapman, Daniel Ethan (2009) The scientist and the potter: Felix-Louis Regnault and his imperialist lens. International Journal of Critical Pedagogy, 2 (1), 88-99.

Clifford, James and George E. Marcus (ed.) (1986) Writing culture: the poetics and politics of ethnography. Berkeley: University of California Press

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Ellis, Jack C. and Betsy A. McLane (2005) A new history of documentary film. New

York and London: The Continuum International Publishing Group.

Evan, Gary (2005) John Grierson: trailblazer of documentary film. Montreal: XYZ Publishing.

Heider, Karl G. (1976) Ethnographic film: revised edition. Reprint, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006.

Howes, Arthur (1982) Jean Rouch: an anthropological film-maker. Undercut, 9, 28-32.

Jacknis, Ira (1988) Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson in Bali: their use of photography and film. Cultural Anthropology, 3 (2), 160-177.

Leacock, Richard (1990) Essays by Richard Leacock.

Levin, G. Roy (1971) Documentary explorations: 15 interviews with film-makers.

Garden City, New York: Doubleday.

Loizos, Peter (1993) Innovation in ethnographic film: from innocence to self- consciousness 1955-1985. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Malinowski, Bronislaw (1922) Argonauts of the western Pacific. Reprint, London and

New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987.

Marks, Dan (1995) Ethnography and ethnographic film: from Flaherty to Asch and after. American Anthropologist, 97 (2), 339-347.

Mead, Margaret (1968) The mountain Arapesh, 1: the record of Unabelin with

Rorschach analysis. Garden City: Natural History Press.

Metz, Christian (1974) Film language: a semiotics of the cinema. Oxford: Oxford

University Press.

Nichols, Bill (1981) Ideology and the image: social representation in the cinema and other media. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.

Rothman, William (1997) Documentary film classics. Cambridge: Cambridge

University Press.

Ruby, Jay (1975) Is an ethnographic film a filmic ethnography? Studies in the

Anthropology of Visual Communication, 2 (2), 104-11.

Stoller, Paul (1992) The cinematic griot: the ethnography of Jean Rouch. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

Torresan, Angela (n.d.) Using film in ethnographic film research.

Films
Asch, Timothy and Napoleon Chagnon (1975) The ax fight. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education Resources. Colour, 30 mins.

Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1951) Trance and dance in Bali.

Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University. Black and white, 22 mins.

Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1953) Childhood rivalry in Bali and New Guinea. Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University. Black and white, 16 mins.

Bregstein, Philo (1986) Jean Rouch and his camera in the heart of Africa.

Watertown, MA: Documentary Education Resources. Colour, 74 mins.

Curtis, Edward S. (1914) In the land of the head hunters. USA: World Film. Black and white, 47 mins.

Eaton, Michael (2010) The masks of Mer. UK: Potlatch Production. Colour, 37 mins.

Flaherty, Robert (1922) Nanook of the north. Paris: Les Freres Revillon. Black and white, 79 mins.

Gardner, Robert (1963) Dead birds. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education

Resources. Colour, 83 mins.

Gardner, Robert (1985) Forest of bliss. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education

Resources. Colour, 90 mins.

Grierson, John (1929) Drifters. UK: Empire Marketing Board. Black and white, 49 mins.

Griffith, D. W. (1915) Birth of a nation. USA: D. W. Griffith Corp. Black and white,

187 mins.

Haddon, Alfred Cort (1898) Torres Strait islanders. Cambridge: University of

Cambridge. Black and white, 4 mins.

Lumière, Louis (1895) Workers leaving the Lumière factory. France: Lumière.

Black and white, 1 min.

Marshall, John (1958) The hunters. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational

Resources. Colour, 73 mins.

Méliès, George (1902) A trip to the moon. Paris: Star Film. Black and white, 12 mins.

Rouch, Jean (1955) Les maîtres fous. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 36 mins.

Rouch, Jean (1957) Moi, un noir. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 70 mins.

Rouch, Jean (1959) La pyramide humaine. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour,

90 mins.

Rouch, Jean (1967) Jaguar. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 93 mins. Rouch, Jean (1970) Petit à Petit. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour,

93 mins.

Rouch, Jean and Edgar Morin (1960) Chronique d’un été. Paris: Argos Films. Black and white, 85 mins.


Vertov, Dziga (1922-1925) Kino-pravda. USSR: Kultkino. Black and white, 10-29 mins x 23.
Images

‘Say, rare Machine, who taught thee to design? / And mimick Nature with such Skill divine’ (anonymously authored poem in praise of the camera obscura, 1747).


Does a study of the history of ethnographic film reveal a tension between creativity and naturalism?

The camera’s ability for representation has been an area of critique in the history of documentary filmmaking. What is real and what is constructed? Are truth and reality the same thing? Can one construct truth? With regards specifically to ethnographic film, this paper will focus on its crucial formative years and, within this period, chronologically trace its development from the first footage of ethnographic interest in 1895 to the radical challenges to documentary leading towards its technical and theoretical modernisation in 1960. I will argue, using film examples, that there has been an ever present tension between creativity and naturalism and that the reason for this tension has come from (1) filmmaking technology’s possibilities and limits, and (2) the social context that influence the filmmaker’s decisions.

In 1895, Felix-Louis Regnault visited the Exposition Ethnographique de l’Afrique Occidentale in Paris. Like a zoo, they consisted of constructed sets marked off by a fence where ‘exotic’ people would seemingly conduct their everyday activities for the pleasure of Europeans who sometimes threw them money. Most importantly, it was considered rude or inappropriate for the Other to return the gaze. This meant that Europeans ‘were free to define, categorize, and label their subjects with impunity’ (Chapman 2009: 98). Reganult’s camera visually recorded ethnographic subjectivity for the very first time, and in Paris subjectivity happened to be at its most extreme, because what Regnault captured was not a skilled pot-making Wolof woman but the power relationship of the colonial era aligned with normative ideas of social evolutionism. Thus the story of ethnographic film begins with its most creative work, not because of its coercive out of place performance in a constructed set, but because of the 1895 ‘creative’ mentality of the viewer. Naturalism it was not.

Left: Sketch of Regnault’s destroyed footage of Wolof woman (SPLA n.d).

Right: Example of exposition poster, Lyon, 1894 (Libèration n.d.).

In 1898, Alfred Cort Haddon led a holistic Cambridge expedition of seven – whose professional roles covered anthropology, ethnology, zoology, neurology, psychiatry, psychology, linguistics, musicology, and photography – to the Torres Strait. Aligning themselves to the natural sciences, Haddon’s positivist generation saw the camera as their equivalent to a microscope or telescope which could visually apprehend material culture  such  as  dress,  technology,  and  architecture  and  overcome  the  objective problem of their discipline (Torresan n.d.). For the first time, the camera was taken into the field for salvage ethnography. However, not yet accustomed to developing technology, Haddon’s 35mm Newman and Guardia camera often jammed, spoiling the film. It was also too big and the film stock too sensitive to be able to move around in the manner now associated with realist documentary. Thus due to the limits of both early technology and the lack of knowledge of how best to take advantage of it, what is produced is, like Regnault’s piece, a performance, although there is at least collaboration between Haddon and the Malo (Eaton 2010).

Malo ceremonial dance in Haddon’s Torres Strait Islanders (The Bioscope 2010).

In the early 20th  century, filmmaking failed in anthropology. Firstly, there was the practical difficulties of taking cameras into the field, and secondly, a new way of anthropological thought arose that focused on the invisible structures that held society together, like kinship and politics over material culture. With academia’s obstacles, the ethnographic film void was filled by commercial enterprise.

In 1912, Gaston Méliès family company Star Film, producer of special-effects films such A Trip to the Moon (1902), travelled to Tahiti and New Zealand to capture authentic locations set within fictional stories or documentaires romances. Visual anthropologist scholar, de Brigard (1975: 19) is critical:

Apart  from  entertainment,  what is the value  of nonscientific  films  of peoples  and customs?...Human behaviour in documentary and fiction films is subject to directorial distortion to such an extent that the film may be scientifically  worthless. However, authenticity can be found on levels untouched by dramatic action.

According to de Brigard (1975: 19), a film that demonstrates such authenticity is Edward Curtis’s 1914 film In the Land of the Head Hunters (aka In the Land of the War Canoes) shot in the Pacific Northwest. Although, to state this film is ‘untouched by dramatic action’ would be false. The film does depict many authentic elements such as artwork, architecture, dance, costume, rituals, and the use of local people as actors; however, it is again weaved into a fictional plot which, in de Brigard’s own

words (1975: 19), ‘concerns a wicked sorcerer, a hero, and their respective factions battling for a girl’. Melodramatic scenes are clearly staged with de Brigard (1975: 19) even commenting that ‘Curtis had learned the same lessons as D. W. Griffiths [Hollywood filmmaking pioneer], and he handled suspense well’. For de Brigard (1975: 19), her praise seems to be directed at the hard work put in by Curtis to capture his subjects.

The photographers  of the Indian  were  not trained  anthropologists,  but the best  of them  did  their  work  with  enthusiasm,  extraordinary  dedication,  and  sensitivity. Curtis, a prolific stills photographer, spent three seasons with the Kwakiutl filming a drama   of  love  and  war  in  settings   painstakingly   reconstructed   for  precontact authenticity.

Here, I must state that it is important not confuse reconstructed authenticity (however painstaking it was to recreate) with authenticity itself, but I can understand de Brigard’s appreciation for the ‘authentic’ scenes being depicted and the ethnographic value of Curtis’s footage to anthropologists. This tension between creativity and naturalism would continue in the commercial sector with arguably the most famous ethnographic film released eight years later in a seminal year for anthropology.

Dramatic scenes from Curtis’s In the Land of the Head Hunters (Canadian Heritage Film

Festival n.d.).

In   1922,   both   Robert   Flaherty’s   film   Nanook   of   the   North   and   Bronislaw Malinowski’s  monograph  Argonauts  of  the  Western  Pacific  were  released.  Both raised the bar in their field and shared common ideas. Malinowski promoted focus on the ‘imponderabilia of everyday life’; Flaherty filmed mundane activities such as eating and sleeping. Malinowski sought the ‘native’s point of view’; Flaherty collaborated with Nanook by showing him new footage and receiving his comments (Loizos 1993: 13). Malinowski moved away from the dominant social evolutionist theory; Flaherty moved away from the dominant adventure and romance storyline. Malinowski  promoted  extensive  stays  in  the  field  and  participant  observation; Flaherty spent several years working and filming in the area and spent one year filming the actual footage released. Malinowski promoted native language learning; Flaherty  was  already  familiar  with  the  language  (Marks  1995:  340).  Flaherty, although not an anthropologist, was certainly an adept filmmaker and pushed the look of naturalism in ethnographic film. However, this realism comes under scrutiny when one investigates behind the scenes. For example, Nanook isn’t his real name, and the family isn’t his family; Nanook hunted with guns rather than spears as depicted in the film; Nanook knew what a gramophone was, contrary to the film; the interior igloo scene was shot in a constructed three-wall igloo set; Nanook battled against an off- camera person in the rope pulling scene, rather than a seal as edited (Rothman 1997, Barnouw 1993, Ebert 2005, Leacock 1990). With this in mind, notions of naturalism clearly weaken. Anthropologist and filmmaker Timothy Asch agrees: ‘…the film was scripted. Flaherty used Eskimos as actors playing their own roles and in that sense created a prototype for feature narrative films rather than documentary films’ (Crawford and Turton 1992: 196). From this statement, Asch might also agree with my own thoughts that the film should be considered strictly under the hybrid fiction/non-fiction genre of ethnofiction or docudrama and not ‘documentary’ as reflected in the categorisation and reviews on popular Internet websites such Wikipedia, IMDb, and Amazon. However, Hollywood film critic Roger Ebert (2005) is more sympathetic:

“Nanook” is not cinema verite. And yet in a sense it is: The movie is an authentic documentary  showing the creation of itself. What happens on the screen is real, no matter  what  happened  behind  it…It  has  an  authenticity  that  prevails  over  any complaints  that some of the sequences  were staged.  If you stage a walrus hunt [a

separate  scene to the one with the seal], it still involves hunting a walrus, and the walrus hasn’t seen the script. What shines through is the humanity and optimism of the Inuit.

Both Asch and Ebert’s comments are valid but whereas Asch, the anthropologist, is looking for scientific authenticity, Ebert, the commercial cinemagoer, wants authentic emotion. This tension has arisen through two reasons. The first – the influence of technology – is evident from the hand cranked 35mm Bell & Howell camera that limited Flaherty to the tripod and thus necessitated staging but with the new Akeley Gyro head it enabled him to pan and tilt, which became a Flaherty trademark. Richard Leacock  (1990:  1),  a  documentary  filmmaker  and  Flaherty’s  once  cameraman, explains the three-walled igloo: ‘The photographic emulsions were slow by contemporary standards, hence the absolute need to construct an igloo which was open on one side to let daylight in and afford room to set up the tripod’. The second reason – the social context (in Flaherty’s case commercialism) – is evident from Flaherty’s decision to sacrifice absolute reality for entertainment. Leacock (n.d.) recognises this: ‘When these films were made there was only one place to show films and that was in commercial cinemas. There were no film clubs, no film schools, no television. The cinemas were run, in most cases, by the big movie producers and they were run for profit’. Leacock (1990) explains the rope fight:

Both the Flahertys [Robert and his wife Frances] were acutely aware that after the almost miraculous success of Nanook, they still faced the same problem in their subsequent  films.  This is why there  are sequences  in all the films  except  Moana, which  was  a  bust  at  the  box  office,  that  in  my  view  are  “crowd  pleasers”.  The struggle between Nanook and the seal at opposite ends of a rope. The same sequence with Tiger King and the basking shark and then again in Louisiana Story with the boy and the alligator. These served as comic relief, no more, no less. In all these scenes there were some sturdy fellows at the other end of the rope.

These early 20th  century ethnographic films must be put in the social context of commercial   filmmaking.   These   filmmakers   had   no   obligation   to   represent ethnographic subjects in the scientific or sensitive way that an anthropologist would. In defence of his old employer and friend, Leacock (1990) continues: ‘Cheating? This

accusation implies that Flaherty had claimed that his films were pure “observation”. This is not so. Flaherty was making “movies” to be shown in Theaters along with the hokum coming out of the studios.’ In the most straightforward argument for the rights of creativity over naturalism in early ethnographic film, Leacock (1990) simply states

‘Robert Flaherty never claimed to be an Anthropologist’.

Left : Nanook attempts to eat the gramophone record in Rouch’s Nanook of the North (True

Films 2004).

Right: One-man crew of Flaherty films Nanook in precarious conditions (Quintero 2011).

Between  1922,  the  year  Nanook  was  released,  till  1925,  a  different  style  of filmmaking happened in Russia. Dziga Vertov, directing the Kino-Pravda newsreel series, meaning ‘cinema truth’, combined the naturalism of the first cinèmatograph actuality films by the Lumières’ in 1895 with the technical creativity that D. W. Griffith pioneered with his 1915 Hollywood film Birth of a Nation to create what one would call today social documentary. Documentary scholars Ellis and McLane (2005:

28)  describe  Vertov’s  ethos:  ‘His  iconoclasm  was  intended  to  free  film  from bourgeois obfuscation of story and the effete pleasures of theatrical performance in order to arrive at the truths of the actual world’. In 1929, influenced by the films in Russia, John Grierson’s Drifters filmed the workers of a North Sea fishing trawler and started the British Documentary Film Movement and its ‘creative treatment of actuality’ (de Brigard 1975: 25). For both Vertov, being a young man in a new Communist Russia, and Grierson, being raised in a household supporting the poor and

the labour movement (Evans 2005), there are certainly parallels between their left- wing ideologies and their representational and uncensored style of filmmaking, which would in turn influence fiction films most notably in post-Fascist Italy in the form of Italian neorealism and the French and British New Wave in the late 1950s and 1960s. For anthropologists, this socially influenced shift towards naturalistic filmmaking in the  1920s  was  important  because  it  was  filmmaking’s  first  major  turn  towards minimal stagecraft.

Left: Newsreel showing the underprivileged in Vertov’s Kino-Pravda 1

(Germanwarfilms.com n.d.).

Right: Trawlermen at work in Grierson’s Drifters (University of Stirling Archives 2011).

Between 1936-1938, Bateson and Mead’s film work in Bali and New Guinea differed from others in two aspects. Firstly, they were anthropologists whose intentions were strictly for scientific research. Bateson explains: ‘We tried to use the still and the moving picture cameras to get a record of Balinese behaviour, and this is a very different matter from the preparation of a “documentary” film or photographs’ (Bateson and Mead 1942: 49). Secondly, they used the new 16mm Movikon camera (Jacknis 1988), instead of the heavier and more expensive 35mm. This allowed Bateson, the technician of the pair, more freedom to capture everyday naturalist behaviour. ‘We tried to shoot what happened normally and spontaneously, rather than to decide upon the norms and then get the Balinese to go through these behaviours in suitable lighting’ (Bateson and Mead 1942: 49). One issue that came out of their

visual ethnography was the need to find balance between science and humanity, with Mead leaning on the side of the objective former, and Gregory the subjective latter. Mead, like Haddon and the early anthropologists, believed in the neutrality of the camera, envisioning that anthropologists could leave a filming camera in the middle of a village and return later to empirically analyse the data. Bateson disagreed and thought a mobile anthropologist was needed to engage in all aspects of life with the subject. The difference in their objective/subjective opinion remained throughout their lives and is evident from a 1976 discussion where in the following extract, Bateson has just argued that filming should not be on a tripod but handheld (Askew and Wilk 2002: 42-43):

Mead:                And therefore you’ve introduced variation into it that is unnecessary. Bateson:             I therefore got the information out that I thought was relevant at the

time.

Mead:                That’s right. And therefore what do you see later? [Referring to an earlier comment about altered material becoming unscientific.]

Bateson:             If you put the damn thing on a tripod, you don’t get any relevance. Mead:                No, you get what happened.

Bateson:             It isn’t what happened.

(Several short exchanges later)

Bateson:             If  Stewart  [the  interviewer]  reached  behind  his  back  to  scratch himself, I would like to be over there at that moment.

Mead:                If you were over there at that moment you wouldn’t see him kicking the cat under the table. So that just doesn’t hold as an argument.

Bateson:             Of  the  things  that  happen,  the  camera  is  only  going  to  record  1 percent anyway.

Mead:                That’s right.

Bateson:             I want that 1 percent on the whole to tell.

The most important part of this discussion comes from Bateson and the acknowledgement of his own subjectivity.
Bateson:             …I think the photographic record should be an art form.

Mead:                Oh  why?  Why  shouldn’t  you  have  some  records  that  aren’t  art forms? Because if it’s an art form, it has been altered.

Bateson:             It’s undoubtedly been altered. I don’t think it exists unaltered.

This acceptance of the inevitable altering filmmaker is an early sign of the reflexivity that would later become a concern in its textual counterpart in the 1970s and 1980s, most notably with the publication of Writing Culture (1986). Jacknis (1988: 171) writes ‘Research involving human subjects attain objectivity not by ignoring the role of the observer, but by explicitly considering it as part of the investigation,’ and continues (1988: 173) ‘Bateson and Mead’s work was ahead of its time’. This reflexivity  or  ‘disciplined  subjectivity’  –  an  appropriate,  more  conservative  term given by their daughter Mary Catherine Bateson (1984: 163) – was indeed supported by Mead (1968:15-16), with the last line highlighting the delicate balance needed between the innate creativity of subjectivity and the naturalism of objectivity:

There  is  no  such  thing  as  an  unbiased  report  upon  any  social  situation…It  is comparable to a color-blind man reporting on a sunset. All of our recent endeavors in the social sciences have been to remove bias, to make the recording so impersonal and thereby  meaningless  that neither  emotion  nor scientific  significance  remained. Actually in matters of ethos, the surest and most perfect instrument of understanding is our own emotional response, provided that we can make a disciplined use of it.

However, Bateson and Mead’s academic work isn’t without its creative faults. In Trance and Dance (1951) two separate dances, one shot in December 1937 and the other in February 1939 (Jacknis 1988: 171), were edited and presented as one. Going further, John Marshall’s much-acclaimed The Hunters (1958) constructed a two-week story from several years of footage. In particular, the film’s set piece of a long, single hunt is actually from several ventures, whilst the hunters themselves are occasionally interchanged with other similar looking people (Heider 1976: 35, Loizos 1993: 22). Loizos (1993: 22) explains the medium’s technical limitations for presenting narrative precision:

Many writers have noted that because of the way film is typically edited, it tends to create  the  illusion  of  single  continuous   event  unless  we  are  deliberately   told otherwise,  because  at  the  level  of  images  it  lacks  the  grammatical   qualifying adjectives  ‘some’ ‘most’ ‘many’ ‘all’ (Metz 1974, Nichols 1981). With the simple insertion of such terms writers can move back and forth between the general and the particular, but in film these issues are much harder to manage.
Left: The camera records the child’s fear and jealousy, illustrating Mead’s research in
Childhood Rivalry in Bali and New Guinea (PACE n.d.).
Right: Bateson on one knee as he films handheld from the Iatmul child’s eye level in New
Guinea, 1938 (Community Manager 2010).
In  1946,  travelling  down  the  Niger  river,  one  person  would  avoid  such  creative pitfalls by, instead, embracing them in his search for truth. Frenchman Jean Rouch, like Bateson and Mead, was fortunate to be an anthropologist working with a smaller

16mm Bell & Howell camera (de Brigard 1975), but added to this would be four more technical factors that would lead Rouch to create a groundbreaking style of documentary. Firstly, early in his project, his tripod went overboard and forced Rouch to fully adopt a handheld shooting style (de Brigard 1975, Cousins and Macdonald

1996: 264). Secondly, new 16mm film stock that required less light emerged. Thirdly, portable synchronous sound recorders, such as Rouch’s Nagra, was developed. And fourthly, by 1960, Rouch and his cameraman Michel Brault had constructed the even lighter and silent (so as not to be heard by the sound recorder) KMT Coultant-Mathot

16mm camera whose slimline body could be placed over the shoulder; this would be the prototype for the popular Éclair camera.

Rouch handling an over-the-shoulder Éclair camera (DER n.d.).

All four factors freed the camera to become more spontaneous and mobile, in particular in accessing small, quiet, and low-light environments like the informal and imitate privacy of someone’s home. The development in synchronised sound that we take for granted today also allowed subjects to speak for themselves instead of having the filmmaker’s voice-over like in Mead and Bateson’s work or Marshall’s The Hunters, which now draws criticism for its omniscient narration (Aitken 2006: 384); sync sound would also push towards the mainstream use of subtitles (Loizis 1973: 11,

13). French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard wrote that in Rouch’s seminal psycho-sociological  film  Chronique  d’un  été  (1960,  co-directed  with  sociologist Edgar Morin) set in Paris, it ‘was the first time I heard a worker speak in a movie’ (Di Iorio 2013). As a result of these technical advances, Rouch managed to capture an unprecedented degree of naturalism and humanity in his subjects.

Although Rouch’s filmmaking style can be traced to these moments of mechanical liberation, his deeper ethos was influenced by the social context. In the years towards the decolonialisation of West Africa by France and Britain, Rouch was interested in Europe ‘decolonising themselves’ (Stoller 1992, Loizos 1973) through subverting European understanding of West Africa on topics like magic, urban migration, and racial attitudes. In essence, he aimed to return Regnault’s gaze, and most notably he did so with the humorous ‘reverse anthropology’ of Petit à Petit (1970) where a Nigerien flies to Paris to study their culture.

Damouré conducts measurements on Parisians for his ‘ethnology diploma’ in Rouch’s Petit à

Petit (Encounters n.d.).

Technically inspired by the urban hardship naturalistically depicted by Vertov and Italian neorealism, and philosophically inspired by the creative artist/subject relationship’s ploy for truth of Flaherty and Surrealist paintings (Bregstein 1986), Rouch combined them to create cinéma vérité, a filmmaking style committed to depicting truth through self-reflexivity and, in particular, the extreme acknowledgement of the subjective presence of the camera. Like Flaherty’s Nanook, Rouch’s films are what he himself called ‘ethnofiction’, only he stretched the tension between creativity and naturalism so far that, to viewers, fiction and reality seemed to circle round and blur into each other.

Three innovative truth-seeking tactics stand out in Rouch’s films that produce the grey area between creativity and naturalism. The first tactic is provocation via the

‘observer effect’ with the camera and filmmaker as an ‘active agent’ (Loizos 1993:46) leading subjects into situations and emotions that could reveal a truth that would otherwise lie dormant. La pyramide humaine (1959) begins with Rouch recruiting a group of white students for his film about black-white relations but warns that ‘some of you will have to be the racists’. In the Chronique d’un été café table scene, Rouch creatively guides the natural discussion to caress out truths about people’s fears, prejudices, beliefs, and ignorance. Rouch explains:

When you have a microphone and when you have a camera aimed at people, there is, all of a sudden, a phenomenon  that takes place because people are being recorded: they behave very differently  than they would if they were not being recorded. But what has always seemed very strange to me is that, contrary to what one might think, when people are being recorded, the reactions that they have are always more sincere than those they have when they are not being recorded. The fact of being recorded gives these people a public. (Cousins and Macdonald 1996: 269)

Left: Young black-white friendships and romances are explored in Rouch’s La pyramide humaine (Álvarez 2009).

Right: Guided by Rouch, Parisians speak frankly about race in Rouch and Morin’s Chronique d’un été (Blondesearch n.d.).

The second tactic is collaboration, or the egalitarian ‘shared anthropology’ approach of giving ‘voice’, with the subjects as unofficial co-technicians, co-writers, co- directors, and informant-feedback commentators who mould the ethnographic film into a collective truth, becoming the precursor to indigenous filmmaking. In Moi, un noir (1957), the subject is also the film’s informal voice-over narrator. This replaces the traditional tightly scripted, all-seeing, all-knowing commentary of the filmmaker, or ‘voice of God’ (Loizos 1993: 12), and it addresses historic power relations in ethnographic film. In Chronique d’un été, the subjects are allowed to watch footage of themselves as Rouch films their different critical, defensive, protesting, and praiseful responses. Rouch explains the relationship between such a collaboration and new technology:

New techniques and equipment [allow] you to make feedback during the next visit to the  people  and  work  on  the  film  with  the  people,  which  is  very  important.  For example, now you can use small Super-8mm projectors and you need only a small Honda electrical generator to project the film where you want…Going back, stop on a frame,  going  back…collecting   information  that  would  be  impossible  to  collect without these tools. It's impossible to stop the priest or the Pope while he is saying his mass and say, ‘Why are you going from the right to the other part of the alter with this book.’ But, you can do it if you show the Pope or the priest the film — he can say [why he's] there. (Johnson 1978)
Left: The subject, Edward G. Robinson, looks directly at the camera and via voice-over introduces the viewer to his suburb in Rouch’s Moi, un noir (De Película n.d.).

Right: Subjects watch themselves in a cinema and offer opinions in Rouch and Morin’s

Chronique d’un été (The Metropolis Times 2012).

The third tactic – which also falls under ‘shared anthropology’ but which differs in the way truth is excavated – is improvisation by the subjects who perform a role that is a variation of themselves so as to attempt to uncover a subconscious or off-the- record personal truth behind the surface layer of everyday formality. In Moi, un noir the  subjects  take  on  ‘characters’  they  aspire  to  be  like  and  perform  this  role throughout the film revealing through their improvisation their own possible aspirations and frustrations in life. Documentary filmmaker and scholar Howes (1982:

28) praises the protagonist: ‘He expresses himself freely, improvising a dialogue which strikes one as overpowering in its honesty, intimacy and poignancy’. In the

standout scene of Chronique d’un été, Marceline’s improvisation powerfully morphed with her true memories of Jewish deportation with her father. She would later explain:

My truth is not in this film even though the memories of deportation which I evoked are real; and that is where all the ambiguity of cinema-verité exists, even if I thought about that scene in advance before shooting and it was a question of me finding ‘the tone’, but my truth in this sequence  is there because I had really lived what I was talking about. (Rouch and Morin 1962 in Loizos 1993: 63)

Left: A reflective scene allowing the character ‘Edward G. Robinson’ to reveal the subject

Oumarou Ganda in Rouch’s Moi, un noir (Losada 2010).

Right: Marceline painfully improvising as the camera follows from an unobtrusive distance in

Rouch and Morin’s Chronique d’un été (Images de Cinéma 2007).

Supporters of Rouch like Loizos (1993: 54) write ‘there is a real case for saying that by…“improvising” and “provoking” Rouch offered us something which perhaps comes closer to the truth than a stilted “film of record” might have done’. However, de Brigard (1975: 28) writes that his work has been described by some as ‘inveterate amateurism’ and ‘incurable dilettantism’, whilst Richard Leacock and the Direct Cinema movement across the Atlantic argued against Rouch’s provocative style and thought that the ‘fly on the wall’, non-intervention approach could better present objective truth: ‘We find that the degree to which the camera changes the situation is mostly due to the nature of the person filming it. You can make your presence known, or you can act in such a way as not to affect them’ (Cousins and Macdonald 1996:

257). Here, Leacock switches the power of presence from camera to filmmaker; however, I would argue that unless the subject was unaware they were being filmed, then the camera, no matter how hidden the filmmaker, still retains its power. The importance of Rouch to ethnographic film, then, is not the filmmaker’s provocative and collaborative tactics for truth per se, but rather his acknowledgement of the camera as a powerful, deforming, non-objective instrument that his tactics serve to convey.

In conclusion, from 1895 to the 1920s, anthropologists were hindered by the physical and economic difficulty in ethnographic filmmaking as well as the discipline’s analytical turn from the positivist study of material culture to the abstract study of invisible structures (e.g. Regnault’s Wolof women in Paris, Haddon’s Torres Strait expedition), subsequently this left the space for commercial films to depict ethnographic subjects (e.g. Méliès’s documentaires romances, Curtis’s In the Land of the Head- Hunters, Flaherty’s Nanook of the North). In the 1920s, left-wing social movements led to the creation of realist social documentary (e.g. Vertov’s Kino- Pravda, Grierson’s Drifters). In the 1930s, the smaller and lighter 16mm camera provided greater filmmaking freedom, and the refocus on scientific research raised questions over filmmaker objectivity/subjectivity and highlighted the notion of reflexivity to anthropology (e.g. Bateson and Mead’s research in Bali and New Guinea). In the 1950s, Rouch’s naturalistic handheld 16mm filmmaking style complimented the creative truth-seeking ethos of cinéma vérité and its active agency. Fundamentally, Rouch opposed the empiricist theoretical ideas of Haddon, Vertov, and Mead by not believing the camera to be an objective truth-telling machine, but instead he heavily built on the collaborative work of Flaherty and the reflexive thoughts of Bateson to find his truth (it would take at least another decade before anthropologists working in the textual medium publicly questioned their own systematic biases in the construction of their written ethnographies, at least in the USA). Beyond 1960, innovations in technology – e.g. wireless mics, cheaper and user-friendly video and DV cameras, digital editing, and Youtube – and changing social contexts – e.g. increased academic interest in ethnographic films (e.g. the 1968 formation of Documentary Educational Resources, which produced Asch and Chagnon’s 1975 The Ax Fight with its pedagogic presentation of a single, continuous

‘sequence’),   emergence   of   ethno-entertainment   television   programmes   (e.g.

Granada’s Disappearing World 1969-1993 series), new post-structuralist anthropological theory (Loizos 1993: 12), increased ethnographic film writing (e.g. Ruby 1975, Heider 1976, Nichols 1981), indigenous filmmaking (e.g. Worth and Adair’s Navajo Film Themselves 1966 series), and experimental filmmaking (e.g. Gardner’s Dead Birds 1963 and Forest of Bliss 1985) – all continued to shape and challenge the definition of ethnographic films.

As stated at the top of this essay, there has indeed been a tension back-and-forth between   creativity   and   naturalism   not   only   in   the   chronological   history   of ethnographic films but, more importantly, within individual films themselves. As outlined above, this tension was born from, firstly, the possibilities and limitations of technology and, secondly, the social context. From 1895 to 1960, this tension reached its pinnacle in the subversive films of Jean Rouch who taught future ethnographic filmmakers the importance reflexivity and future ethnographic film viewers the importance of scepticism.

References

Book and articles
Aitken, Ian (ed.) (2006) The concise Routledge encyclopedia of the documentary film. Reprint, Oxon: Routledge, 2013.
Askew, Kelly and Richard R. Wilk (eds.) (2002) The anthropology of media: a reader. Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
Barnouw, Erik (1993) Documentary: A history of the non-fiction film. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1942) Balinese character: A photographic analysis. New York: Academy of Sciences.
Bateson, Mary Catherine (1984) With a daughter’s eye: A memoir of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson. New York: William Morrow.
Crawford, Peter Ian and David Turton (eds.) (1992) Film as ethnography. Reprint, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000.
Chapman, Daniel Ethan (2009) The scientist and the potter: Felix-Louis Regnault and his imperialist lens. International Journal of Critical Pedagogy, 2 (1), 88-99.
Clifford, James and George E. Marcus (ed.) (1986) Writing culture: the poetics and politics of ethnography. Berkeley: University of California Press
Cousins, Mark and Kevin Macdonald (1996) Imagining reality: the Faber book of documentary. London: Faber and Faber, 2006.
de Brigard, Emilie (1975) The history of ethnographic film. In Hockings, Paul (ed.)
Principles of visual anthropology. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Levin, G. Roy (1971) Documentary explorations: 15 interviews with film-makers.
Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
Loizos, Peter (1993) Innovation in ethnographic film: from innocence to self- consciousness 1955-1985. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Malinowski, Bronislaw (1922) Argonauts of the western Pacific. Reprint, London and
New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987.
Marks, Dan (1995) Ethnography and ethnographic film: from Flaherty to Asch and after. American Anthropologist, 97 (2), 339-347.
Mead, Margaret (1968) The mountain Arapesh, 1: the record of Unabelin with
Rorschach analysis. Garden City: Natural History Press.
Metz, Christian (1974) Film language: a semiotics of the cinema. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Nichols, Bill (1981) Ideology and the image: social representation in the cinema and other media. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
Rothman, William (1997) Documentary film classics. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Ruby, Jay (1975) Is an ethnographic film a filmic ethnography? Studies in the
Anthropology of Visual Communication, 2 (2), 104-11.
Stoller, Paul (1992) The cinematic griot: the ethnography of Jean Rouch. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
Torresan, Angela (n.d.) Using film in ethnographic film research.
http://www.methods.manchester.ac.uk/methods/ethnographic-film/index.shtml
[Accessed 17 March 2013].
Films
Asch, Timothy and Napoleon Chagnon (1975) The ax fight. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education Resources. Colour, 30 mins.
Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1951) Trance and dance in Bali.
Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University. Black and white, 22 mins.
Bateson, Gregory and Margaret Mead (1953) Childhood rivalry in Bali and New Guinea. Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University. Black and white, 16 mins.
Bregstein, Philo (1986) Jean Rouch and his camera in the heart of Africa.
Watertown, MA: Documentary Education Resources. Colour, 74 mins.
Curtis, Edward S. (1914) In the land of the head hunters. USA: World Film. Black and white, 47 mins.
Eaton, Michael (2010) The masks of Mer. UK: Potlatch Production. Colour, 37 mins.
Flaherty, Robert (1922) Nanook of the north. Paris: Les Freres Revillon. Black and white, 79 mins.
Gardner, Robert (1963) Dead birds. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education
Resources. Colour, 83 mins.
Gardner, Robert (1985) Forest of bliss. Watertown, MA: Documentary Education
Resources. Colour, 90 mins.
Grierson, John (1929) Drifters. UK: Empire Marketing Board. Black and white, 49 mins.
Griffith, D. W. (1915) Birth of a nation. USA: D. W. Griffith Corp. Black and white,
187 mins.
Haddon, Alfred Cort (1898) Torres Strait islanders. Cambridge: University of
Cambridge. Black and white, 4 mins.
Lumière, Louis (1895) Workers leaving the Lumière factory. France: Lumière.
Black and white, 1 min.
Marshall, John (1958) The hunters. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational
Resources. Colour, 73 mins.
Méliès, George (1902) A trip to the moon. Paris: Star Film. Black and white, 12 mins.
Rouch, Jean (1955) Les maîtres fous. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 36 mins.
Rouch, Jean (1957) Moi, un noir. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 70 mins.
Rouch, Jean (1959) La pyramide humaine. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour,
90 mins.
Rouch, Jean (1967) Jaguar. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour, 93 mins. Rouch, Jean (1970) Petit à Petit. France: Les Films de la Plèiade. Colour,
93 mins.
Rouch, Jean and Edgar Morin (1960) Chronique d’un été. Paris: Argos Films. Black and white, 85 mins.
Vertov, Dziga (1922-1925) Kino-pravda. USSR: Kultkino. Black and white, 10-29 mins x 23.
I

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Classen Constance ed. The Book of Touch

The Book of Touch

Edited by Constance Classen. Berg: Oxford and New York 2005. 461 pp.

The Book of Touch is the 3rd installment of Berg Publishers Sensory Formations Series. This collection documents the work of Concordia University’s Sensoria Research Team, and states as its aim to understand “the role of the senses in history, culture and aesthetics, by redressing […] the hegemony of vision and privileging of discourse in contemporary theory and cultural studies […]”. The volume surveyed here challenges conventional ways of seeing, knowing and experiencing the world by examining various functions and qualities of touch as the most elusive of our senses. Its editor Constance Classen applies a comparative approach to sensory experiences and expressions with the aim to ultimately rehabilitate tactile perception.

In her introduction Classen refers to touch as the “hungriest sense of postmodernity” (2), suggesting that little is left to feel in a society dominated by images. With the recent proliferation  of  cultural  turns  one  might  now  sceptically  anticipate  yet  another  turn –  a
‘tactile’ turn, let’s say. The editor on her part is careful not to overstress the scope of tactile culture within anthropology’s recently rediscovered sensory project. Instead, she situates the sense of touch amongst other cultural practices, grounding it in personal experience as well as social life. In her formulation, touch is not only a private act, but a fundamental medium for the expression, experience and contestation of social values and hierarchies (1). In what may be considered a pioneering approach, Classen acknowledges the influence of French philosophers Deleuze & Guattari, Derrida, Irigaray and Nancy who reflected on the subject of tactility in the late twentieth century. Drawing on this background, she amplifies its scope by dealing with the sense of touch in non-Western cultures while avoiding the habit of emphasising touch as mere physicality.

Assimilating the texts of philosophers, novelists and anthropologists, The Book of Touch is divided into nine sections, each containing a multitude of essays and dictums on the given  theme.  The  collection  approaches  questions  such  as  ‘How  is  touch  developed differently across cultures?’ ‘What are the boundaries of pain and pleasure?’ or ‘Is there a politics of touch?’ and refers to topics ranging from a nineteenth-century account of phantom limb pain to recent reflections on the handling of photographs.
Part One is entitled Contact and grounds on the premise that we learn a “mother touch” along with a mother tongue. Engaging and conversing with other people is not limited to language, but also involves Tactile Communication, as Ruth Finnegan’s first chapter explores with regard to the social conventions of touch. In a comparable manner David Howes’ article Skinscapes. Embodiment, Culture, and Environment, employs the category of “skin knowledge” as a way of investigating the imprint of social values and environmental perceptions upon the body’s surface. Drawing on ethnographic examples from various indigenous as well as Western cultural contexts, Howes demonstrates how one’s material environment — i.e. landscape — is linked to the ‘skinscape’. He suggests that by living in urbanised, technologised Western societies “we are perhaps not so likely to think of our bodies as pastoral landscapes irrigated by rivers but we may well think of them as cityscapes, connected by road systems, communication systems and waterworks, and charged by electricity, which at times runs low” (36). Howes ends his text with some rather disturbing thoughts regarding the possible future role of ‘skincapes’ matching the virtual landscapes of cyberspace.

In  the  introduction  to  the  second  part  of  the  book,  entitled  Pleasure,  Classen comments on the sparsity of this subject within scholarly discourse. Unsurprisingly, the chapters do not deal with pleasure as a corporeal sensation as much as they consider the socio-historical development of values in relation to physical pleasures. While John E. Crowley demonstrates that the concept of bodily comfort is a development of the eighteenth century — prior to which clothing, furniture and housing had been understood as indicators of social status rather than as commodities enhancing physical comfort —, geographer Yi-Fu Tuan warns that the ongoing restriction of touch will break our sense of connectedness with the material world and, eventually, our possibilities for aesthetic enjoyment. A comparison of Jean-Paul Sartre’s and Simone de Beauvoir’s philosophical concepts of touch in the last essay of this section reveals some significant and hitherto underappreciated differences in the two philosopher’s notions of eros and the appropriation of the other.

Part three is entitled Pain and makes extensive (critical) use of Michel Foucault’s writings on discipline, punishment and the power relations implicated in torture and physical suffering. Conceived as the “counterpleasure” in postmodernity (MacKendrick 1999), the sensation of pain is assigned an intensity of experience, increasingly equated to authenticity. The vocabulary and metaphors of pain employed in the assembled texts are remarkably rich.
Most especially, Judy Pugh’s The Language of Pain in India provides meticulous descriptions of physical and psychological suffering that reflect the underlying “integrated mind-body system” in Indian culture (118). The Tortures of the Inquisition and the Invention of Modern Guilt by Ariel Glucklich and Sex, Pain and the Marquis de Sade by David B. Morris are meanwhile prescient in linking pain to the concept of guilt, suggesting that the intentional infliction of suffering and pain constitutes the ‘internalisation’ of a system of social control.

Part Four, Male Bonding, and Part Five, Women’s Touch, are dedicated to the construction of masculine and feminine identities. Classen starts off with the observation that “[o]ne of the key features of masculine touch […] seems to be how it is used among men to express ideals of manliness, establish social hierarchies and ensure group solidarity” (155). One of the outstanding texts, Intimacy and Gender in the Trenches of the First World War, illustrates how norms of tactile contact between men and concepts of masculinity changed profoundly during the First World war, a war that so extraordinarily brutalised the male body yet paradoxically allowed for “fear, vulnerability, support and physical tenderness” (195). The two texts on Imperial Touch: Schooling Male Bodies in Colonial India deal with concepts of cleanliness and physical habits, shedding light on the imperial practices of disciplining the
‘colonised body’. They are particularly rewarding when read in comparison to the Doon

School Chronicles, a series of ethnographic films made by David MacDougall between 1997-

2000 that explore the importance of tactility to education and discipline in an elite Indian all- boy school.
Women’s Touch deals with the controversial concept of women as touch and focuses mainly on female handiwork. Be rural China, eighteenth and nineteenth-century England or early twentieth-century Paris, skillful manipulation of material and ‘craftswomanship’ has been crucial not only in securing a means of subsistence, but also in developing an alternative feminine aesthetic. It signifies an important antipode to the growing dematerialisation and the of loss physical reality of our world (Richard Sennett’s forthcoming book on craftsmanship elaborates on this theme). Other texts in the section include stirring descriptions of women’s foot binding in China and childbirth in an Inuit community.

Control, the sixth part of the volume, covers subjects as diverse as Norbert Elias’ view of medieval manners, the mechanisms of touch in a Victorian prison and the rules of touch in modern museums. The assembled texts reveal contemporary Western discourse concerning the control of touch as “an essential means of establishing and maintaining an orderly world”
(259), arising “from anxieties about the vulnerability of the social body – and ultimately, of individual bodies – to invasion and violation” (262). Elias’ text on dining habits in the Middle Ages is particularly revealing in demonstrating how the increased regulation of the sense of touch and the heightened awareness of body boundaries has come to be considered a vital part of the civilising process. Classen labels the modern etiquette of keeping one’s hand to oneself as “hands-off policy” (260). She describes how in the early museums of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the exhibits on display were explicitly expected to being touched; over time, with the increased importance of sight, the sense of touch lost its intellectual and aesthetic value. Philip Priestley’s significant study on Victorian prison life complements Foucault’s analysis of visual surveillance in the modern prison (1979) by taking into consideration the important aspect of prisoners’ tactile disciplining and the institutionalised re-education of their sense of touch. What makes the section on Control so interesting is the combined analysis of the disruptive power of unregulated tactility and its connection to the current crisis of security in Western society.

Part Seven is entitled Uncommon Touch and comprises a collection of texts on rather obscure tactile experiences, as for instance the chapter on Visceral Perception demonstrates. Drawing the attention to an inner world not customarily associated with sensory perception, the article’s author Drew Leder investigates the “perceptual reticence of our viscera as compared to the body surface” (338). Noting that our interoceptive vocabulary is mostly developed in relation to pain, Leder elucidates that the “hiddenness” of our visceral organs is essential to their healthy functioning: they require seclusion from the external world just as the sensorimotor body requires exposure. Other chapters in the section dealing with the sensual consequences of amputation, paralysis, phantom limb pain, blindness, loss of the sense of smell or the so-called “locked-in syndrome” take an interest in the experience and perception of people with an altered or heightened awareness of touch. In direct contrast, the futurist F.T. Marinetti’s 1921 essay on Tactilism contains an early plea to view touch as an art form, anticipating a time when people would “contribute indirectly toward the perfection of spiritual communication [...] through the epidermis” (331). For me, however, the outstanding text is Temple Grandin’s Autism and “The Squeeze Machine”, a vivid and haunting account of her experiences as an autistic child. She recalls how she secured her body boundaries by inventing a “squeeze machine” – a box with panels to squeeze her body – which eventually helped her find some security and relax. The examples presented in Uncommon Touch also leave a strong impression on the reader, sensitising his/her own ability for tactile experiences.

Part eight, Tactile Therapies, is about healing practices and alternative medicines applied to touch. Beginning with Jesus as “the best-known example of a tactile healer in the West” (347), Classen draws from various examples of therapeutic touch ranging from more familiar practices such as physiotherapy to Non-Western medical procedures such as acupuncture, sweat baths, Ayurvedic massage, qigong, yogic exercise and therapeutic dance. S.V. Govindan’s article, for example, traces the roots of massage in both Asian and Western cultures back to 2500 BC and illustrates the benefits of tactile Ayurvedic medicine for strengthening both body and mind. The idea of healing through touch, however, exceeds the mere medical field in so far, as it is also frequently associated with magic or supernatural influences, as the case of ‘royal touch’ illustrates. In his essay, The King’s Touch, Keith Thomas  examines  the  widespread  medieval  believe  that  the  touch  of  the  sovereigns  of England or France could cure scrofula, also called ‘King’s Evil’. The custom survived well into the eighteenth century, when it increasingly came to be regarded as superstitious and died out. Touch is nevertheless still closely related to religious as well as secular power and plays an important role in the affirmation of social orders and roles. Roy Porter’s text on the physician’s touch in eighteenth-century England, for instance, shows that tactility in a medical context is not just simply related to the notion of cure but can also be perceived as “a performance in which the physician enacts his identity through a set of established procedures and conforms his right above all, to touch and penetrate the body” (349). The articles in this section help to clarify that medical or healing touch does not only concern treatment, but also examination and diagnosis and is thus far from being limited to so-called ‘alternative therapies.’

The ninth and final part — Touch and Technology — deals with the acceleration of machines and bodies. All the assembled texts analyse ways in which modernity has changed, or continue to change, human perception. Taking into consideration the physical interaction between bodies and machines, the commodification of touch and telepresence as an out-of- the-body experience, this section provides a compact outline of the role tactility plays in digital technology. On this note, Dorinne Kondo’s Artisans and Machines in Japan argues that  industrialisation  is  not  necessarily  opposed  to  craftsmanship.  People  in  Japan  who perceive themselves as working with machines do not necessarily feel as alienated as is often assumed in the West; Kondo locates the reason for the effortlessness handling of modern technologies in the traditional Shinto spirits considered to inhabit inanimate objects and,
therefore, mechanical devices too. Susan Kozel’s description of Experiences of a Virtual Body derive from her participation in an art installation called “Telematic Dreaming” in which she visually detached herself from her body by projecting her image into another room. The audience’s reactions to the artist’s projected self were transmitted back to the artist from where she could then move her body in response. Taking part in the experiment for a month, Kozel  realised  that  one’s  internalised  behaviour  does  not  easily  change  along  with  an alteration of one’s appearance. She describes how her personal experience did not correspond to the cyber-feminist paradigm of cyberspace as a liberating disembodied space in which age, sex and race do not matter. She nevertheless proposes that virtual reality might potentially offer “a space for us to recognize the tendency for our prejudices and conditioning to be carried forward, and to work at a new way to interrelate” (445). The volume concludes with an epigrammatic note on data streams and virtual touch.

In brief introductory chapters that precede each section, Classen contextualises and summarises the selected passages. Nonetheless, the metaphors she uses to describe the organisation of the sections and the images she uses are often rather clumsy. The compilation also regrettably makes very little use of the writings of Merleau-Ponty and/or Luce Irigaray, although Classen acknowledges their influence on issues concerning tactile culture and kinaesthetic perception in her preface to the volume. Igrigaray’s remarkable statement in An Ethics of Sexual Difference that “God is always entrusted to the look and never sufficiently imagined as tactile bliss” (1993:162) could have enhanced further reflections on the contradiction inherent in the concept of a solitary spectator-god, as well as on gendered renderings of touch in general. Notwithstanding, the volume presents a very well informed and inspiring collection of academic as well as literary sources carefully extracted from a seemingly endless reservoir of writings on the subject of touch across cultures and times.

The Book of Touch is definitely a book that invites its readers to rummage through – an eminently tactile practice that corresponds to the sensory value of books as described by Classen in her introductory remarks (7). It is a precious collection for anyone interested in the formation of the senses yet might be dissatisfying for readers who expect a systematic overview of the topic. At times, The Book of Touch appears like a random compilation of aphorisms whereas at other times it gives the impression of a profound hotchpotch that makes the evasive and often inarticulate sense of touch tangible. The editor herself describes The Book of Touch as “a compilation of the expected and the unexpected” (4) – meaning, I
suppose, that the book occasionally refers to the obvious whilst also holding a number of truly imaginative and surprising sections. In short, this is a superb and infuriatingly diverse anthology.

Michaela Schäuble, University College London

References cited:
Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. New York: Vintage Books,
1997.
Irigaray, Luce. An Ethics of Sexual Difference. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1993. MacKendrick, Karmen.   Counterpleasures, Albany: State University of New York Press,
1999
Sennett, Richard: The Craftsman. New Haven: Yale University Press (forthcoming 2007)

Metode Pelaksanaan Bangunan

 LINGKUP PEKERJAAN Lingkup pekerjaan yang akan dilaksanakan yakni : I                PEKERJAAN PERSIAPAN II               PEKERJAAN TANAH DA...