This page was created by Paul Merchant, Jr.. 

Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Vukoder Abstract

In 2014, upon the centennial of the outbreak of World War I, the National Archives initiated a systematic effort to restore and reorganize two major motion picture collections capturing the tumultuous era. The 111-H series, which holds 470 titles created by the Army Signal Corps and offers extremely detailed corresponding metadata, reflects a key goal of the unit—to create a vast and unflinching historical account for posterity. Alternatively, the 660 titles of the CBS-WWI collection, gathered a half century after the war from 26 international film archives to make CBS’s 1964 World War One television program, signify an attempt to retrospectively write that history. In recounting the story behind the creation of each collection, delineating their recurring themes, and analyzing the series’ two models of sight—looking upon and looking back; making and remaking history—this paper reconsiders how we have collectively mapped the history of the Great War. Furthermore, this paper argues, the tools and platforms of the Media Ecology Project provide a productive means to place these series’ two historiographic perspectives in direct dialogue, exploring how public memory has been and may be shaped.

This page is referenced by: