Much of the material related to the first female cine-workers in Iran and Egypt is not centrally curated in an archive but scattered across a variety of platforms, personal collections, books, databases, and other locations. The scattered nature of these sources reflects current practices of official state film archives in Egypt and Iran, and also connects to the lived realities of female cine-workers in the way that their unruly bodies often dissonated with the national film narratives with which they were expected to align and to represent, and experienced stigma as a result. I take this scattering seriously to propose “gathering despite scattering,” a decolonial and feminist method of constructing the archives that form the basis of our historical analysis. Gathering despite scattering embraces the corporeal, learns from provenance, and challenges the national and Eurocentric frameworks that have often strictured the histories of cinema in places like Egypt and Iran.
Gathering Despite Scattering: A Feminist and Decolonial Method of Curation Available to Purchase
Claire Cooley is currently a lecturer at Tufts University. Her research and teaching focus on transregional media connections within the Middle East and the larger Indian Ocean world. Her work has appeared in publications including Jump Cut, Film History, Spectator, and Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication as well as anthologies on industrial networks of cinema in India and stardom in the Arab world. She is currently writing a book on the interconnected history of cinema in the Middle East and South Asia from the turn of the twentieth century to the 1960s through a sound-inspired methodology.
Claire Cooley; Gathering Despite Scattering: A Feminist and Decolonial Method of Curation. Feminist Media Histories 1 April 2024; 10 (2-3): 10–33. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2024.10.2-3.10
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