Artículo
The Pilagá of the Argentine Chaco through an exoticizing and ethnographic lens : the swedish documentary film following indian trails by the pilcomayo river
Fecha
2013-10Registro en:
Gustavsson, Anne Thérése Ellen y Giordano, Mariana,2013. The Pilaga´ of the Argentine Chaco through an exoticizing and ethnographic lens : the swedish documentary film Following Indian trails by the Pilcomayo River. Journal of Aesthetics & Culture. Suecia: Coaction Publishing, vol. 5, p. 1-16. ISSN 2000-4214.
Autor
Gustavsson, Anne Thérése Ellen
Giordano, Mariana Lilián
Institución
Resumen
In this article, we explore how traveling relates to image  production and how transcultural filmic representations  both uphold and are sustained by a "coloniality of seeing."  We pay special attention to the historical conditions of  film making in an expedition context and the expectations  associated with early film in Sweden. We discuss this  through the study of the documentary film Following Indian  Trails by the Pilcomayo River, which was recorded during  a Swedish expedition to the Argentine Chaco in 1920  and later released in Stockholm in 1950 during a private  screening organized by the Swedish Chaco Travellers  Association. We argue that the film presents an account  inspired by classic ethnography which rescues and puts  into circulation images of indigenous people from the  "impenetrable" and "savage" Chaco. The ethnographic  emphasis in the narrative seems to have shifted with time  as it was probably only partly present during the shooting  of the footage. In the narrative mode of "monstration,"  when bodies meet machines "in the field," native performances  are presented as an "unstaged" and realist spectacle.  Later in the 1950 "macro-narration," encompassing the  final cutting and editing of the original footage, fragments  of spectacle are systematized into an ethnographic description  of primitive life.