The films of John Akomfrah represent one of the most significant bodies of artistic production in the post-war era in Britain, yet little attempt has been made to analyse the consistencies and divergences across them.
James Harvey’s John Akomfrah is the first comprehensive analytic engagement with these films, offering sustained close engagement with the artist’s core thematic preoccupations and aesthetic tendencies. His analysis negotiates the contextual and theoretical layers of Akomfrah’s rich and complex films, from the intermedial diaspora aesthetics of Handsworth Songs (1986) to the intersectional spatial ecopolitics of Purple (2017).
Positioning Akomfrah in the burgeoning black British arts and cultural scene of the 1980s as a member of Black Audio Film Collective, Harvey traces the evolution of a critical relationship with the postcolonial archive in his early films, through analysis of documentaries made for television in the 1990s and up to more recent film installations in museums and galleries.
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction: Positioning John Akomfrah
1.The Ghosts of Other Stories: Thatcherism and Postcolonial Britain
2.Black Stars: From Racial Iconicity to Black Atlantic Collectivity
3.Memory-images: Catharsis, Embodiment and the Aesthetics of Remembrance
4.Why They Come: Migration Films in the Age of ‘Refugee Crisis’
5.Changing Site, Changing Sight: The Spatial Turn
6.Water, Earth, Elephants: The Human Destruction Trilogy as Political Ecology
7.‘Staking Claims on the Real’: An Interview with John Akomfrah
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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