The Battle of the Somme (1916) and They Shall Not Grow Old (2018): archivists, historians, lies and the archive

Pub Date : 2021-03-18 DOI:10.1080/17411548.2021.1899423
Lawrence Napper
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article takes Peter Jackson’s use of Imperial War Museum footage in They Shall Not Grow Old (2018) and its reception as a starting point for considering the dilemma for film archives over how to enable their work to reach greater audiences without compromising their own reputation or the integrity of the collections they are custodians over. The first part of the article considers some of the issues around the distinction between film restoration and digital enhancement, and some of the pitfalls inherent in a range of well-established archival practices for ‘outreach’. The second half or the essay considers the resistance of military and film historians to the understanding of film footage as evidence, taking the 1916 documentary of The Battle of the Somme as a key case study. Overall the article argues that essay films, and invitations for film-makers and visual artists to offer creative responses to collections should be backed up with a route back to the source material within the collection, and that attention should always be paid to the necessity to explain archival footage to a general audience in the many instances where such footage doesn’t ‘speak for itself’.
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索姆河战役(1916)和他们不会变老(2018):档案工作者,历史学家,谎言和档案
摘要本文以彼得·杰克逊在《他们不会变老》(2018)中对帝国战争博物馆镜头的使用及其接受为出发点,思考电影档案馆在如何在不损害自身声誉或藏品完整性的情况下,让他们的作品接触到更多观众的困境。文章的第一部分考虑了围绕电影修复和数字增强之间的区别的一些问题,以及一系列公认的“外联”档案实践中固有的一些陷阱。文章的后半部分以1916年的纪录片《索姆河战役》为关键案例研究,认为军事和电影历史学家对电影镜头理解的抵制是证据。总的来说,这篇文章认为,散文电影,以及邀请电影制作人和视觉艺术家对藏品做出创造性回应,都应该有一条回到藏品中原始材料的途径作为支持,在许多情况下,当档案录像不能“不言自明”时,应始终注意向普通观众解释档案录像的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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