On Positionality and Filmmaking:
The ‘Me’ in the Story
By Farah Hallaba
Being aware of one’s social and cultural standing as a filmmaker and storyteller not only reshapes the story being told but creates it. Narrative helps us “translate knowing into telling” (McGranahan 2015)1. In this translation process, being aware of one’s positionality and how dynamic it is influences the technical and creative approach to the ‘telling.’ It is this process, of translating knowing into telling, that I am interested in extending further through a set of examples and exercises that will be included in the toolkit and briefly presented throughout this essay. Awareness about our social and cultural standing is a process in which we train ourselves to do, be and have certain qualities in our art or research practices. When filmmakers acknowledge their positionality, it allows them to identify their individual privileges and positions within complex power dynamics and hence narrate stories that are nuanced in their interpretations and presentations of social worlds.
A classic example of a film in which the filmmaker is aware of her social position is Tahani Rached’s El Banat Dol, or Those Girls (2006). The success and popularity of this film, I would like to argue, emanates from Tahani’s awareness of her position vis-à-vis the girls she films. This film could have become one in which a privileged Egyptian-Canadian filmmaker imposes her views on a group of underprivileged girls who don’t share her value systems, but instead, Rached spent a considerable amount of time with them before she started filming to understand and interpret the meanings they hold of the world and their values. The time Rached spent with them can be compared to an ethnographic practice known as participant observation — a process in which anthropologists spend long periods of time doing fieldwork to explain, understand and interpret social worlds.
Another example I find relevant here is the Palestinian ethno-fiction film Ghost Hunting (Raed Antoni, 2017), in which Antoni shares his coming to terms with his privilege and authority over the characters he directs and his vulnerability as someone who is haunted by a personal experience in Israeli prisons. As we watch the film, we, the audience, are offered information that allows us to realize and engage with the complex power dynamics within this film. We may be left with questions around ethics as we watch as well, but the ethno-fiction or docu-drama nature of this personal and collective film helps layer and sophisticate these questions. As an audience, we are forced to reckon with our own social and cultural standing as well while viewing the film. No one is only privileged or only marginalized. It is important to keep an eye on this nuance.
A scene from Ghost Hunting (Raed Antoni, 2017).
Beside the conversations that these examples invite and which the toolkit will guide (in ways that are still being formulated), I am also considering including exercises. In one exercise, filmmakers will be asked to record their daily soundscapes, which could then be shared with the group so that participants could guess where and when the sounds were captured. While listening to the recordings, it will hopefully be possible to realize all that goes unheard when we are inside social situations. We train ourselves to mute certain sounds in order to go about our days. However, upon re-visiting these recordings, we become aware of the presence of these sounds. This exercise can help us realize the importance of soundscapes in creating a temporal and spatial ambiance, encouraging filmmakers to use their full sensorium to experience the worlds of their films and ultimately create a more engaging experience for their audiences. The exercise also offers a way to focus on the everyday sensory worlds we inhabit, sparking discussions that could potentially allow participants to realize, through sounds, how they negotiate their relationship with their surroundings and others. By noticing these relationships, participating filmmakers may become more aware of their position as social subjects in the world.
In filmmaking, the practice of moaaysha, or cohabitation, can reveal to filmmakers how their social and cultural positions shape the meanings of the worlds they create, what they know, want to tell and understand. Another way to describe what the previously mentioned films do is “thick description,” a concept coined by anthropologist Clifford Geertz to describe the transformative potential of realizing that realism does not depend on tasweer, or depiction, but on moaaysha. Here is how anthropologist Carole McGranahan describes Geertz’s introduction of thick description in her essay “Anthropology as Theoretical Storytelling:”
Photos by Ali Zaraa
I grew up in the Gulf. My parents migrated to Saudi Arabia in 1995, and I lived there from the time I was born in 1996 until the age of 18. I have stakes in the story I am writing. For example, I am particularly interested in class and family dynamics. This interest inevitably influences my creative process and I am more likely to emphasize these dynamics in my characterizations and storylines. The second category of exercises will focus on the act of imagining a character and its social world. I wonder, for example, how the characters and the worlds they inhabit would have differed had the screenwriter approached another anthropologist to work on the script with her. If moaaysha is the first step in creating thick descriptions of our socio-cultural worlds, imagination is the second step. It allows us to creatively narrate reality. However, what feeds the imagination (sensorial, emotional, intellectual experiences) is as complex as our social worlds and biases are.
Farah Hallaba
Farah obtained her MA in Social Anthropology and Visual Ethnography from the University of Kent. She started @anthropology_bel3araby انثروبولوجي بالعربي in 2019, aiming to publicize anthropology in an accessible way and in Arabic. She has been doing short engaging online videos and collaborative workshops since then, mainly Visual Anthropology workshops and collaborative Anthropology workshops about social class and migration to the Gulf which led to “Being Borrowed,” a multi-media exhibition and publication released in 2022. Farah was a resident teaching fellow at CILAS teaching Ethnographic Studies 2021-2022. She also shares a creative space in downtown Cairo, where she collaborates with artists to offer spaces for creative discussion-based knowledge production.
- Escobar, Cristóbal. “The Colliding Worlds of Anthropology and Film-Ethnography.” Anthrovision [online], vol. 5.1, 2017. https://doi.org/10.4000/anthrovision.2491
- Folkes, Louise. “Moving beyond ‘shopping list’ positionality: Using kitchen table reflexivity and in/visible tools to develop reflexive qualitative research.” Qualitative Research, Sage Journals, 2022.
- Kohl, Ellen, and Priscilla McCutcheon. “Kitchen table reflexivity: negotiating positionality through everyday talk.” Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography, vol. 22, no. 6, 2015, pp. 747-763.McGranahan, Carole. Anthropology as Theoretical Storytelling. Savage Minds, 2015.
Filmography
- Ahlam Momkena, or Permissible Dreams. Directed by Ateyyat El-Abnoudy, 1982.
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El Banat Dol, or Those Girls. Directed by Tahani Rached, Studio Misr, 2006.
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Geld Hayy, or Living Skin. Directed by Ahmed Fawzi Saleh, Al Batrik Art Production, 2010.
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Ghost Hunting. Directed by Raed Antoni, Le Films de Zayna, Dar Films, Akka Films, 2017.
- Leviathan. Directed by Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel, Sensory Ethnography Lab, Cinema Guild, 2012.
Footnotes
The author of this article also published a book in 2020 titled “Writing Anthropology, Essays on Craft and Commitment.” One chapter, titled “Anthropology as Theoretical Storytelling,” elaborates more on the article.
2As per conversations with people who closely worked with Ahmed Fawzy Saleh.