Colonialismo

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        Colonialismo

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            Colonialismo

              8 Archival description results for Colonialismo

              8 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              ¡Argelia Independiente!
              ES ES-OVNI RSC-4081 · Item · 1957
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              About media manufacturing a opinion state by using population fears and desires. News from the time about the Algerian conflict and the Independence and about what this possibility meant to france.

              Untitled
              ES ES-OVNI RSC-4278 · Item · 2018
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              The video departs from the idea of symbolizing the material, physical and emotional exploitation in which colonization was based and embedded by the robbery of the Alger’s port by The French Colonial troupes. Taking into an account the personal and subjective experience of the city of Algiers, a double narration is built by the artist and an Algerian collaborator (Ahmed Chaabi) weaving between both a portrait of personal and historical feelings of the place. A poem of love about domination and mistrust, about everything we want to know in depth but that we know impossible to understand in its entirety, what the Kasbah had represented yesterday and what it is today, its myths and its realities, and an uncertain future that we all share under the threat of globalization. More than any other district of Algiers, the Kasbah represents the “otherness”. Its winding streets are a labyrinth to the unknown where you want to get lost and where, at the same time, you are afraid of being lost. An unknown world, even for the Algerians, where the real plays to hide.

              Untitled
              La Guerre d'Algérie
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S011-SS002-0002 · Item · 1972
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              On the first of November 1954, “Bloody All Saints Day” exploded in a series of attacks throughout Algeria carried out by what would later become the National Liberation Front. It was the start of the Algerian war. The first film made about this conflict became the first indispensable documentary about the Algerian war. It includes unforgettable testimonies and archives to that allow us to “dare to look at the truth head on". In the rigorous search for historical truth, the authors committed themselves to understanding the different parts of the conflicts, such as the "pieds-noirs", the career soldiers, the Harkis, the Fellaghas, the civil population... Yves Couriere, writer and journalist, has followed all the major stages of the Algerian drama, on the field, between 1958 and 1963. Before making this film, from 1967 to 1971, he published a four-volume history, the first, of the Algerian war.

              Untitled
              ES ES-OVNI RSC-4350 · Item · 1985
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              The history of Algeria from before 1830 to May 8, 1945. Going against all preconceived notions, the film reveals the reality of a country that, prior to colonization, had reached a level of development comparable to many European nations. It also exposes the hidden truths of colonial practices. The film ends with the May 8, 1945 massacre in Sétif, a prelude to the November 1954 uprising. With the participation of writer Kateb Yacine. In this documentary, made for Algerian Radio and Television in 1985, René Vautier revisits colonial history, tracing Algeria's past through engravings, drawings, and paintings from the pre-colonial era, accompanied by numerous interviews. The film includes extensive archival footage and an excerpt from René Vautier’s La Folle de Toujane, in which teacher Gilles Servat speaks with his students.

              Aliénations
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S012-SS007-0071 · Item · 2004
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              Algeria is a young country, made through a long history. The 20th century was full of unprecedented historic upheavals that brutally affected societies and cultures, casting doubt on value and belief systems that had been constructed over the centuries. “Aliénations” is a modest attempt that looks at the suffering that Algerians can experience today, as they face a crisis in many senses: religious, political, economic and within the family.

              Untitled
              Algérie(s)
              ES ES-OVNI CTX-S011-SS006-0079 · Item · 2002
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              1992, Algeria plunges into violence. Thanks to various unpublished archives, this document offers another vision power, opposition and the heart of Algerian society.

              Untitled
              Algérie en flammes
              ES ES-OVNI RSC-4340 · Item · 1958
              Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

              At the dawn of the Algerian independence struggle, René Vautier produced a film about the French conquest of Algeria in 1830. It was severely criticized by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which regarded this prediction of an Algerian rebellion against the foreign oppressor as a danger to national security. In reaction to this accusation, in 1957 René Vautier went over to the "other side" and shot, camera in hand, a film about and with the Algerian resistance movement. René Vautier wanted to show what he saw and counter the French colonial propaganda version. Naturally, the French side sought him out for what they considered to be treason. Nevertheless, 800 copies of the film were printed from East Germany, in 17 languages, and distributed worldwide (except in France, where it had to wait for a screening at the occupied Sorbonne in May 68). But not all Algerian independence fighters agreed that their revolution should be filmed by a Frenchman, especially as René Vautier's contact had been liquidated. Caught up in the meanders of revolutionary power struggles, and without being told why, the filmmaker is detained in a prison by decision of the Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic (GPRA) along with other Algerians, while the film is broadcast by the FLN... Twenty-five months in a prison in Denden, west of Tunis. After the declaration of independence, René Vautier founded the first Algerian Audiovisual Center and directed the first film in independent Algeria: Le peuple en marche. During this shoot, René Vautier was wounded three times. He came under direct fire from the French army, deliberately aimed at his camera. A piece of shrapnel lodged in the Breton filmmaker's (hard) head. He would carry this memory with him all his life, making him probably the only filmmaker with a piece of camera in his head.