3.8 Article

Alas, Nitrate didn't Wait, but does it Really Matter? Fiery Losses, Bureaucratic Cover-ups, and the Writing of Indian Film Histories from the Relics of Cinema at the National Film Archive of India

Journal

BIOSCOPE-SOUTH ASIAN SCREEN STUDIES
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 96-115

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INDIA PVT LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0974927616635946

Keywords

National Film Archive of India; nitrate film fire; film historiography; Indian cinema; Indian bureaucracy; early cinema

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This article analyzes the nitrate film fire that took place at the National Film Archive of India (NFAI) in 2003 by locating it in the larger schema of nitrate film fires from across the world. It takes stock of the losses incurred in the fire, and the State's response to the incident, to observe that despite the best of intentions of the people working at the institution, the losses were perhaps eventually inevitable owing to three reasons: the NFAI's less-than-ideal working through the years, the idiosyncratic functioning of the Indian bureaucratic machinery, and the nitrate film reel's ephemerality. Discussing the global fetishization of the nitrate film reel as an artifact in and by itself, it observes how for various reasons, the same never became true for the NFAI and India; and analyzing the trends in Indian film scholarship so far, especially on silent cinema, it argues that the losses were less consequential for Indian film historiography than might have been expected, for the Indian film scholar has long moved beyond the nitrate film reel as the basic source material toward the writing of imaginative social and cultural histories achieved through mobilizing a host of ancillary sources.

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