
Inês Ponte publicou o artigoMapping a film programme for rural Southern Angola: exploring regional film history and uneven pathways to access no Transnational Screens, 16(2), 137-160. Número especial Transnational Encounters With/In Colonial Archives: Agency, Artistry and Ethics.
Abstract
Since the inception of cinema, many films have been produced in one context but intended for consumption in another – colonial films for metropolitan audiences being a prime example. Cultures that both produce and consume moving images have generally received more attention than those that, tough represented on screen, neither produce nor access these images. The rural and peripheral southern region of Angola, with its long colonial history and independence from Portuguese rule in 1975, exemplifies this latter case. Drawing on both offline and online archival research, this article explores the cinematic landscape of southern Angola, focusing on the challenges and implications of curating a century-spanning film program of varied styles for a rural audience with limited access to cinema. It examines the region’s cinematic history across shifting political contexts, technological changes, and disparaties in film consumption while addressing the contingent accessibility of these films. Adopting the perspective of a film programmer preparing to offer rural cinema screenings in a region marked by sparse production and restricted access, the article reflects on dilemmas of content selection and cinematic engagement. In doing so, it traces the longue durée of Angola’s history, highlighting the interplay between historical change and the fragmented, non-linear contexts of film production, circulation, and preservation.
Referência: Ponte, Inês. 2025. “Mapping a Film Programme for Rural Southern Angola: Exploring Regional Film History and Uneven Pathways to Access.” Transnational Screens 16 (2): 137–60. doi:10.1080/25785273.2025.2549145.
