School, Program, and Course Information

  • Interested in creating short archival videos?

    Enroll in AFRA 3575: Black Documentary Film Archival Practices

    Fall 2022 Tu 4:00-6:30 pm

    Black Documentary Film Archival Practices  is a course that examines how archives are deployed to tell Black diasporic narratives, historical and present-day representations, and the impact of these images. Throughout this course, students will sharpen their understanding of non-fiction aesthetics and modes of production through the construction of short-form archival-based media.

    Coursework will provide students with tools to think independently about questions of representation, embedded biases, form, formats, and intended audiences through films, readings, and non-fiction multimedia. Students will further develop the skill to contextualize current events within a historical framework and hone their visual voices. We will interrogate authorship, accountability, and narrative ownership. This course will delve into tensions around access, formal considerations, and ethical usage of pre-existing material from various sources, including public institutions, private collections, stock footage libraries, YouTube, and social media.

    For more information: Professor Martine Granby at martine.granby@uconn.edu

    https://africana.uconn.edu/2022/04/28/new-fall-2022-course-black-documentary-film-archival-practices/ 

     

    For more information, contact: Africana Studies Institute at africana@uconn.edu