Released in 1978 to critical disdain, Brutes and Savages has been described as 'a lame attempt to exploit taboos using artifice and constipated attitudes' (Kerekes and Slater, 2016, p195) whilst its onscreen 'presenter' Arthur Davis has found himself dismissed as 'the most monstrous, untamed ego in the entire history of the sub-genre' (Goodall, 2006, p19). In this paper, I do not intend to defend the frequent abjection, misogyny, racism and animal cruelty of Brutes and Savages. Instead, what I wish to argue is that, due to its running expository narration and the presence of Davis in the misappropriation of nation and location (including a fictional and nonsensical African country) - the film could be seen as a largely unacknowledged precur...
Amidst continued debates about the commercial success and ‘hybrid’ style of Slumdog Millionaire (dir...
The Savage Screen: Horror, Indigeneity, and Settler Cartographies of Being, critically analyzes the ...
Contemporary wildlife documentaries, geared for the television market, exhibit a recurrent pattern: ...
NoThe first ever English-language title devoted exclusively to the shocking, controversial and influ...
This article is an attempt to understand the significance of the considerable textual complexity and...
NoBeing the first ever English-language title devoted exclusively to the controversial and influenti...
In the post-independent Zimbabwe, to mention the word ‘Gukurahundi’ is to make a reference to a tabo...
In this short-length study the author presents the award winning documentary film director Michael M...
Western media has consistently misrepresented or underrepresented African people and cultures. This ...
As scholars charting representations of the 1807 abolition of the transatlantic slave trade in the U...
Copyright © The Author(s). During 1931, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown gave a popular talk at Columbia Unive...
The last two decades have witnessed much scholarly debate around discursive and non-discursive lega...
This paper examines how Bassek ba Kobhio\u27s 1995 film Le Grand Blanc de Lambarene uses music to de...
Framed by an understanding of Raoul Peck as a transnational filmmaker performing the role of a publi...
This thesis, entitled The Return of the Noble Savage: By Popular Demand, is written after several y...
Amidst continued debates about the commercial success and ‘hybrid’ style of Slumdog Millionaire (dir...
The Savage Screen: Horror, Indigeneity, and Settler Cartographies of Being, critically analyzes the ...
Contemporary wildlife documentaries, geared for the television market, exhibit a recurrent pattern: ...
NoThe first ever English-language title devoted exclusively to the shocking, controversial and influ...
This article is an attempt to understand the significance of the considerable textual complexity and...
NoBeing the first ever English-language title devoted exclusively to the controversial and influenti...
In the post-independent Zimbabwe, to mention the word ‘Gukurahundi’ is to make a reference to a tabo...
In this short-length study the author presents the award winning documentary film director Michael M...
Western media has consistently misrepresented or underrepresented African people and cultures. This ...
As scholars charting representations of the 1807 abolition of the transatlantic slave trade in the U...
Copyright © The Author(s). During 1931, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown gave a popular talk at Columbia Unive...
The last two decades have witnessed much scholarly debate around discursive and non-discursive lega...
This paper examines how Bassek ba Kobhio\u27s 1995 film Le Grand Blanc de Lambarene uses music to de...
Framed by an understanding of Raoul Peck as a transnational filmmaker performing the role of a publi...
This thesis, entitled The Return of the Noble Savage: By Popular Demand, is written after several y...
Amidst continued debates about the commercial success and ‘hybrid’ style of Slumdog Millionaire (dir...
The Savage Screen: Horror, Indigeneity, and Settler Cartographies of Being, critically analyzes the ...
Contemporary wildlife documentaries, geared for the television market, exhibit a recurrent pattern: ...