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Chapter 16 - Craig and Damon Foster

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2023

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Summary

Background

After schooling in Cape Town and compulsory military service where they were placed in the South African navy’s film unit, Craig and Damon Foster looked as though they might follow the example of many young white English-speaking South Africans and leave the country. But they were drawn back in part by the initiative of a school friend James Hersov who wanted to make a documentary film about the San and managed to get the support of CocaCola. The brothers spent several years in the Kalahari with the San and two films resulted.

The first film, Tracks (1999), centred on the theories and technological innovation of South African tracking expert and theorist Louis Liebenberg and on attempts to use San expertise and Liebenberg’s Cybertracker software for the cause of conservation. This version also used American National Wildlife Federation representative Judith Kohler as a commentator who argued that San knowledge of the Kalahari provided a more holistic and profound understanding of the area than western science. The second film was The Great Dance (2000) which was a surprise winner of the Golden Panda for best wildlife documentary in 2000 (Figure 16.1). A comparison of the expository style of the earlier film with the poetic style and narration of the later one helps understand how the Foster brothers’ views and interests shifted and how this shift shaped their later film careers.

Tracks

The earlier film uses several narrators whose views are in narrative and visual tension. The opening of the film offers a glimpse of mystical powers as a narrator says that people dream of being among animals and invisible to them, but that the San, through their tracking ability and what it reveals of animal behaviour and movements, can actually do that. ‘Mystical narrator’ says that the San can transform themselves in the dance.

The second narrator is Louis Liebenberg and for him the film was a way of at once expanding on his influential hypothesis of tracking as the origin of scientific hypothesis formation (Liebenberg 1990) but also of showing the advantages of his patented Cybertracker software as a way for the San to serve conservation by logging the presence of animals through their tracks.

Type
Chapter
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Wildlife Documentaries in Southern Africa
From East to South
, pp. 205 - 212
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2022

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