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Nomadic Cinema

A Cultural Geography of the Expedition Film
  • Alison Griffiths
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2025
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Film and Culture Series
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About this book

Nomadic Cinema is a groundbreaking history of early-twentieth-century exhibition films, analyzing them as visual records of colonialism that also offer new possibilities for recognizing Indigenous histories.

Author / Editor information

Alison Griffiths is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Baruch College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She is the author of Wondrous Difference: Cinema, Anthropology, and Turn-of-the-Century Visual Culture (2002), Shivers Down Your Spine: Cinema, Museums, and the Immersive View (2008), and Carceral Fantasies: Cinema and Prison in Early Twentieth-Century America (2016), all published by Columbia University Press. Griffiths received a Guggenheim Fellowship to conduct research for this book.

Reviews

Vanessa R. Schwartz, director of the Visual Studies Research Institute, University of Southern California:
In this broad-ranging study, readers will journey across the globe with one of the premier interpreters of ethnographic images and rediscover the institutions and people who made them. Griffiths unpacks fascinating archival materials and successfully offers a rich visual archaeology of expedition films made a century ago about places such as Mount Everest, Borneo, and the Silk Road while also relocating images of distant places in our own time. Part study of images born as salvage anthropology, Griffiths creatively salvages the images themselves, returning them to the descendants of the Indigenous communities depicted, breathing new life into them through current decolonial perspectives. A history of the production and reception of the anthropological image and a thoughtful consideration of the structures of the expedition film genre, under Griffiths's bold revisionist take, Nomadic Cinema also surprises by morphing into a work of ethnography.

Tom Conley, author of Cartographic Cinema:
Scintillating, written with grace and elegance, Nomadic Cinema tells us how the seventh art takes us, as Baudelaire had put it, anywhere out of this world. Reaching into medieval and early modern cartography, focusing on a welter of early travel films and those we now affiliate with virtual reality, Alison Griffiths reflects on how the structure and process of travel and expedition films inform us of the fragility and depredation of the world in which we find ourselves. A masterpiece in analysis, erudition, and social commitment, Nomadic Cinema is the first, the finest, and most telling work of its kind, a compass and an enduring point of reference for us all.

Catherine Russell, author of Archiveology: Walter Benjamin and Archival Film Practices:
In Nomadic Cinema, Alison Griffiths takes us on an epic tour of expedition filmmaking from the silent era to virtual reality, with her usual great rigor and insight. Her expansive approach keeps close eye on the role of the Indigenous peoples who populate early films on the sidelines, and the adventure proves that the archive of colonial cinema remains a rich vein of cultural encounter and reinvention.


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Decolonial Praxis
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1
Part I Prehistories and Contexts of the Expedition Film

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31

2 The Dialectics of Adventure
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59
Part II The Small Expedition Film and Archival Return

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103

Native American Identity and Digital Return
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136
Part III Affective Geography and Spatial Epistemologies

Monumentality, Mount Everest, and Indigenous Intermediaries
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163

The Anxious Optic of the 1926 Morden-Clark Expedition Across Central Asia
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199

Virtual Reality, Indigenous Futurism, and the Legacy of the Expedition Film
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 25, 2025
eBook ISBN:
9780231549882
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
352
Downloaded on 31.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/grif19258/html
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