Black Lives in Southampton

From the collection of

Wessex Film and Sound Archive
Wessex Film and Sound Archive is based in Winchester. Providing the opportunity to see and hear history, the archive contains nearly 40,000 film, video and sound recordings relating to Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Berkshire, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, ranging from late Victorian times to the present day. It includes both amateur and professional material, local newsreels, military and maritime subjects, as well as footage produced by individuals, businesses and organisations.

Black Lives in Southampton

This video can only be viewed in libraries

Find your nearest library

In a complex and thought-provoking conversation, women share their experience of prejudice and expectations of beauty.

Community Video from the Southampton-based Black & Asian Video Panel 1998 exploring how Black communities value individuals based on their complexion. Written & directed by community activist Don John.

A panel of Black women discuss attitudes towards Black beauty and Colourism. They talk about the ways it has effected the lives of themselves and others, how it varies by location, how change can be affected, and what they think the future holds for Black beauty standards.


Tags

From the collection

Black Voices

Celebrating the lives and stories of Black British communities...

For decades, the lives of Black British people have been presented on our screens through a white cultural lens, resulting in stories related to these communities being skewed, sensationalised, skimmed over, or simply ignored altogether. However, generations of community groups and grassroots filmmakers have worked to redress that balance, creating works that communicate their own experiences and perspectives on life in Britain, while capturing the stories of their neighbours, relatives and elders.

This collection brings together examples of this important community work, including oral history interviews from the Black Cultural Archives, the Brixton-based institution set up in 1981 to combat “a lack of popular recognition of, and representation by people of African and Caribbean descent in the UK”. These personal stories sit alongside works produced by initiatives such as the Black Arts Video Project, Black Women’s Media Project and WITCH, which use documentary, performance and personal expression to explore themes of identity, memory and cultural history.

Individually, these works offer windows into the lives of others; taken as a whole, they create a living tapestry of community history, using video, independent filmmaking and regional television as an act of cultural activism. 


14 videos in this collection

1

Interview with Norma Best: Part One

2

Interview with Mr Marke and Mr Murry: Part One

3

Interview with Father Oluwole Abiola

4

Interview with Mrs Smith

A short documentary that explores the Yoruba language and its place amongst the British diaspora
5

NATIVES

6

Memories in Mind

7

Going Home

8

Can I Touch It?

9

Interview with Mr Gail and Mrs Smith

10

The Never-ending Poem - Children of the Black Triangle

11

A Tribute to Black Women (They Don't Get A Chance)

12

Black Lives in Southampton

13

See Me Too: Celebrating Swindon's Diverse Heritage - Adeola

14

Ella

View full collection