Are You Fighting?

From the collection of

London’s Screen Archives
London’s Screen Archives is a network of over 50 organisations with a collective vision – to preserve and share London’s history on film. The network is managed by Film London and we work with our partners to digitise, preserve, and offer access to their moving image collections.

Are You Fighting?

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Supported by the miners' trade unions, the NHS workers take a stand against the privatisation of the health service.

In response to the Thatcher government's efforts to privatise a proportion of key state-controlled industries and institutions, the trade union movement gained momentum in the mid-1980s. Made with the Joint Co-ordinating Committee of Health-Worker Unions in Brighton, this community video primarily captures the campaign of East Sussex NHS workers as they battle privatisation efforts and the selling of NHS property in the region. But it also paints a broader picture of solidarity across the working-class population - miners speak up in support of the health workers and call on the public to do the same, as the issues affect everyone and cooperation is crucial. It's a "call to arms" for trade unions, the community and the general public who need to put pressure on the government in order to save "their" health service from "private greed" of the contractors. The speakers and interviewees draw parallels between these local privatisation efforts - such as hospitals and NHS property being sold off - and what's happening in other industries, as well as the country as a whole. They accuse the government of attacking the whole trade union movement and of "looking after their capitalist friends". The only way this battle can be won is by sticking together. Yet the outlook seems bleak; as the viewer is told, several local hospitals are either sold off already or under threat of being so in the near future.

This video is from the London Community Video Archive, a member of the London's Screen Archives Network.


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From the collection

London Community Video Archive

London Community Video Archive collects, preserves, and shares community videos made in the 1970s and 80s in London and the South East.
Portable video recording - now a technology found in most smartphones - became available for the very first time back in the early 1970s, making it possible for individuals and communities to make their own television. The medium was taken up by people previously ignored or under-represented in the mainstream media - tenants on housing estates, community action groups, women, Black and global majority ethnic groups, young people, LGBTQIA+ people, and disabled people. With an overriding commitment to social empowerment and to combating exclusion, 'community video' dealt with issues which still have a contemporary resonance - housing, play-space, discrimination, and youth arts. This rich heritage was under threat of disappearing, both because of the physical decay and disintegration of the videotapes, and the ageing memories of the original community video practitioners. London Community Video Archive, a project based within Goldsmiths, University of London, is recovering and reviving this history so that it can be used as a resource for contemporary debates and activism.

6 videos in this collection

1

Who Cares and How Much?

2

A Happier Old Age?

3

Council Housing in Moulsecoomb-by-Sea

4

Are You Fighting?

5

Gingerbread Holidays

6

From Protest to Resistance

View full collection