Films

The Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf archive at SOAS contains a large and significant collection of moving films. Shot between 1940s and 1970s, the films total approximately 60 hours of 16mm footage in both black and white and colour. The major locations and subjects are largely the same as those in h...

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Date(s) of creation: 1940s- 1970s
Level: Sub-Collection
Format: Archive           

Summary: The Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf archive at SOAS contains a large and significant collection of moving films. Shot between 1940s and 1970s, the films total approximately 60 hours of 16mm footage in both black and white and colour. The major locations and subjects are largely the same as those in his photographs: tribal societies in central India, northeast India, Nepal and Nagaland (although he did not have a movie camera when he first went to the Naga Hills in 1936-1937). From the late 1950s, Professor Haimendorf began to edit and compile footage for broadcast on the BBC and Bavarian Television. One of the films (PP MS 19/07/DIGI002) was actually shot by Ursula Betts and given by her to Professor Haimendorf. For more information see, Alan Macfarlane, ‘Early ethnographic Film in Britain: A Reflection on the Work of Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf,’ Visual Anthropology 23 (5), 2010.
Custodial history: Toward the end of his life, Professor Haimendorf gave this collection of more than 100 different reels of film to his then-student Professor Alan Macfarlane at Cambridge University. Many reels were duplicates, cuts and compilations, and there was no accurate catalogue of the collection. The films, however, were in good condition. At Cambridge, Dr Patricia Bidinger and later Dr Mark Turin produced a summary catalogue; and in the mid-1990s, about 35 hours of the best footage were digitised by the team at Cambridge University and put on the Digita ... View more
Access status: Restrictions Apply
User restrictions: For permission to publish, please contact Archives & Special Collections, SOAS Library in the first instance
Language: English
Format: Archive