Hugh Brody (born 1943) is a British
anthropologist
An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology. Anthropology is the study of aspects of humans within past and present societies. Social anthropology, cultural anthropology and philosophical anthropology study the norms and ...
, writer, director and lecturer.
Education
In the 1950s he worked as an accountant in Sheffield before passing the entrance examinations for the
University of Oxford
, mottoeng = The Lord is my light
, established =
, endowment = £6.1 billion (including colleges) (2019)
, budget = £2.145 billion (2019–20)
, chancellor ...
.
He studied at
Trinity College, Oxford
(That which you wish to be secret, tell to nobody)
, named_for = The Holy Trinity
, established =
, sister_college = Churchill College, Cambridge
, president = Dame Hilary Boulding
, location = Broad Street, Oxford OX1 3BH
, coordinates ...
.
Career
He taught social philosophy at
Queen's University Belfast
, mottoeng = For so much, what shall we give back?
, top_free_label =
, top_free =
, top_free_label1 =
, top_free1 =
, top_free_label2 =
, top_free2 =
, established =
, closed =
, type = Public research university
, parent = ...
. He is an Honorary Associate of the
Scott Polar Research Institute
The Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI) is a centre for research into the polar regions and glaciology worldwide. It is a sub-department of the Department of Geography in the University of Cambridge, located on Lensfield Road in the south o ...
at the
University of Cambridge
, mottoeng = Literal: From here, light and sacred draughts.
Non literal: From this place, we gain enlightenment and precious knowledge.
, established =
, other_name = The Chancellor, Masters and Schola ...
, and an Associate of the School for Comparative Literature at the
University of Toronto
The University of Toronto (UToronto or U of T) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as King's College, the first institution ...
.
He held the Canada Research Chair at
University of the Fraser Valley
The University of the Fraser Valley (UFV), formerly known as University College of the Fraser Valley and Fraser Valley College, is a Canadian public university with campuses in Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission and Hope, British Columbia. Founded ...
in
Abbotsford, British Columbia from 2004 to 2018.
He is Honorary Professor of Anthropology at the University of Kent, Canterbury.
Anthropologist
In the 1960s, as a graduate student at Oxford, Brody was influenced by
Maurice O'Sullivan
Muiris Ó Súilleabháin (; 19 February 1904 – 25 June 1950), anglicised as Maurice O'Sullivan, was an Irish author famous for his Irish-language memoir of growing up on the Great Blasket Island and in Dingle, County Kerry, off the western ...
's book ''Fiche Blian ag Fás (Twenty Years a-Growing)'', and worked as an anthropologist in Ireland. This led to his book ''Inishkillane, Change And Decline in the West of Ireland''. The field-work for this study took him to
Connemara
Connemara (; )( ga, Conamara ) is a region on the Atlantic Ocean, Atlantic coast of western County Galway, in the west of Ireland. The area has a strong association with traditional Irish culture and contains much of the Connacht Irish-speak ...
and
West Cork
West Cork ( ga, Iarthar Chorcaí) is a tourist region and municipal district in County Cork, Ireland. As a municipal district, West Cork falls within the administrative area of Cork County Council, and includes the towns of Bantry, Castletownbe ...
, where he lived and worked with peasant farmers, fishermen and as a barman in a village bar. Contracted by
Raidió Teilifís Éireann
Raidi (; ; also written Ragdi; born August, 1938) is a Tibetan politician of the People's Republic of China. He served as a vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress from 2003 to 2008, and the highest ranking Tibeta ...
he spent time on
Gola Island
Gola ( or ''Oileán Ghabhla'') is a small island off the coast of Gweedore, County Donegal, Ireland.
The island was unpopulated as recently as 1996 but in recent years people have started to return. A ferry service operates during the holiday sea ...
, off the coast of
County Donegal
County Donegal ( ; ga, Contae Dhún na nGall) is a county of Ireland in the province of Ulster and in the Northern and Western Region. It is named after the town of Donegal in the south of the county. It has also been known as County Tyrconne ...
, research that led to his contribution to the book ''Gola, The Life and Last Days of an Island Community'', co-authored with F. H. A. Aalen.
In 1969, he did his first Canadian work, supported by the Northern Science Research Group at what was then the Canadian
Department of Indian and Northern Affairs
Department may refer to:
* Departmentalization, division of a larger organization into parts with specific responsibility
Government and military
*Department (administrative division), a geographical and administrative division within a country, ...
. This took him to the
skid row
A skid row or skid road is an impoverished area, typically urban, in English-speaking North America whose inhabitants are mostly poor people " on the skids". This specifically refers to poor or homeless, considered disreputable, downtrodden or fo ...
area of
Edmonton
Edmonton ( ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Alberta. Edmonton is situated on the North Saskatchewan River and is the centre of the Edmonton Metropolitan Region, which is surrounded by Alberta's central region. The city ancho ...
, Alberta in the
Canadian Prairies
The Canadian Prairies (usually referred to as simply the Prairies in Canada) is a region in Western Canada. It includes the Canadian portion of the Great Plains and the Prairie Provinces, namely Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. These provin ...
. His report on that work, ''Indians on Skid Row'', published in 1970, led to changes in government policy, especially in relation to
Native Friendship Centre
Friendship Centres are nonprofit community organizations that provide services to urban Inuit, Métis, and First Nations (Status and Non-status) people. Friendship Centres were first established in the 1950s, and there are now more than 100 cen ...
s – crucial in giving support to
Native people
Indigenous peoples are culturally distinct ethnic groups whose members are directly descended from the earliest known inhabitants of a particular geographic region and, to some extent, maintain the language and culture of those original people ...
adrift in Canadian cities.
In the 1970s, as a research officer with the Northern Science Research Group, he did extensive field work in the
Arctic
The Arctic ( or ) is a polar regions of Earth, polar region located at the northernmost part of Earth. The Arctic consists of the Arctic Ocean, adjacent seas, and parts of Canada (Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut), Danish Realm (Greenla ...
, living with
Inuit
Inuit (; iu, ᐃᓄᐃᑦ 'the people', singular: Inuk, , dual: Inuuk, ) are a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic and subarctic regions of Greenland, Labrador, Quebec, Nunavut, the Northwest Territories ...
in the communities of
Pond Inlet
Pond Inlet ( iu, Mittimatalik, lit=the place where Mittima is buried) is a small, predominantly Inuit community in the Qikiqtaaluk Region of Nunavut, Canada, located on northern Baffin Island. To the Inuit the name of the place "is and always ...
on
Baffin Island
Baffin Island (formerly Baffin Land), in the Canadian territory of Nunavut, is the largest island in Canada and the fifth-largest island in the world. Its area is , slightly larger than Spain; its population was 13,039 as of the 2021 Canadia ...
and
Sanikiluaq
Sanikiluaq ( iu, ᓴᓂᑭᓗᐊᖅ ) is a municipality and Inuit community located on the north coast of Flaherty Island in Hudson Bay, on the Belcher Islands. Despite being geographically much closer to the shores of Ontario and Quebec, the co ...
on the
Belcher Islands
The Belcher Islands ( iu, script=latn, ᓴᓪᓚᔪᒐᐃᑦ, Sanikiluaq) are an archipelago in the southeast part of Hudson Bay near the centre of the Nastapoka arc. The Belcher Islands are spread out over almost . Administratively, they belon ...
.
[The peoples' champion](_blank)
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'', and changed its name in 1959. Along with its sister papers ''The Observer'' and ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardian'' is part of the Gu ...
, profile, 27 January 2001. He learned two dialects of
Inuktitut
Inuktitut (; , syllabics ; from , "person" + , "like", "in the manner of"), also Eastern Canadian Inuktitut, is one of the principal Inuit languages of Canada. It is spoken in all areas north of the tree line, including parts of the provinces o ...
,
North Baffin
North is one of the four compass points or cardinal directions. It is the opposite of south and is perpendicular to east and west. ''North'' is a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating direction or geography.
Etymology
The word ''north'' is ...
and South Hudson Bay, and wrote ''The People's Land, Inuit and Whites in the Eastern Arctic''. This is a book that looks at how colonial relations, through the history of the
fur trade
The fur trade is a worldwide industry dealing in the acquisition and sale of animal fur. Since the establishment of a world fur market in the early modern period, furs of boreal, polar and cold temperate mammalian animals have been the mos ...
, church missions and the Canadian government, have shaped the social and psychological circumstances of the far north. The argument and descriptions focus very much on a particular time in a particular place, but resonate with parallel experiences among indigenous peoples around the world. In the course of his work with the Northern Science Research Group, Brody also developed an innovative program that aimed to give new levels of support for families who wanted to live on the land. Brody was also one of those who in the mid-1970s first urged within the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs the idea of the separation of the Canadian north into two indigenous jurisdictions, with that of the east becoming an Inuit political territory. This came into being with the creation of
Nunavut
Nunavut ( , ; iu, ᓄᓇᕗᑦ , ; ) is the largest and northernmost Provinces and territories of Canada#Territories, territory of Canada. It was separated officially from the Northwest Territories on April 1, 1999, via the ''Nunavut Act'' ...
in 1999.
In 1975, Brody resigned from his position in the
Canadian Civil Service
The Public Service of Canada (known as the Civil Service of Canada prior to 1967) is the civilian workforce of the Government of Canada's departments, agencies, and other public bodies.
While the Government of Canada has employed civil servants ...
. He was then based at the Scott Polar Research Institute at the
University of Cambridge
, mottoeng = Literal: From here, light and sacred draughts.
Non literal: From this place, we gain enlightenment and precious knowledge.
, established =
, other_name = The Chancellor, Masters and Schola ...
, where he became an Honorary Associate. In 1976–1978 he worked on the Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project, in the
Northwest Territories
The Northwest Territories (abbreviated ''NT'' or ''NWT''; french: Territoires du Nord-Ouest, formerly ''North-Western Territory'' and ''North-West Territories'' and namely shortened as ''Northwest Territory'') is a federal territory of Canada. ...
, where he was co-ordinator for the
land use mapping carried out in the North Baffin region. He also assembled an Arctic-wide account of Inuit perceptions of land occupancy, building a collage of Inuit voices from all the communities of the Northwest Territories. He later worked on a similar project with Inuit and settlers of
Labrador
, nickname = "The Big Land"
, etymology =
, subdivision_type = Country
, subdivision_name = Canada
, subdivision_type1 = Province
, subdivision_name1 ...
, which was published in ''Our Footsteps Are Everywhere'' (1978).
In 1977, Brody was a witness to the
Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry
{{No footnotes, date=April 2009
The Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry, also known as the Berger Inquiry after its head Justice Thomas Berger, was commissioned by the Government of Canada on March 21, 1974, to investigate the social, environmental, ...
, giving evidence on the nature of northern development, alcohol abuse and
Inuit languages
The Inuit languages are a closely related group of indigenous American languages traditionally spoken across the North American Arctic and adjacent subarctic, reaching farthest south in Labrador. The related Yupik languages (spoken in western ...
. He then became a member of Justice
Thomas R. Berger
Thomas Rodney Berger (March 23, 1933April 28, 2021) was a Canadian politician and jurist. He was briefly a member of the House of Commons of Canada in the early 1960s, entering provincial politics thereafter. He led the British Columbia New Dem ...
's staff, helping to prepare the two volume report that set out the remarkable conclusions of the inquiry.
In the 1980s, working for the
Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs
The Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) is a First Nations political organization founded in 1969 in response to Jean Chrétien's White Paper proposal to assimilate Status Indians and disband the Department of Indian Affairs.
Sin ...
, Brody lived and worked with the
Dunne-za
The Dane-zaa (ᑕᓀᖚ, also spelled Dunne-za, or Tsattine) are an Athabaskan-speaking group of First Nations people. Their traditional territory is around the Peace River in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada. Today, about 1,600 Dane-zaa resi ...
and
Cree
The Cree ( cr, néhinaw, script=Latn, , etc.; french: link=no, Cri) are a Indigenous peoples of the Americas, North American Indigenous people. They live primarily in Canada, where they form one of the country's largest First Nations in Canada ...
of northeast British Columbia – the project and experiences that led to his book ''Maps And Dreams''. This account of anthropological research and cultural mapping with a hunting community, and especially the laying of frontier development onto the ways Dunne-za and Cree see and understand their territories, became a classic of indigenous studies. Its use of alternating chapters, switching between first person narrative and social scientific writing has also given it a significant place in the history of the literature of anthropology.
Brody worked with Justice Berger again in 1991–1992 as a member of the
World Bank
The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans and grants to the governments of low- and middle-income countries for the purpose of pursuing capital projects. The World Bank is the collective name for the Interna ...
's
Morse Commission, which had the job of assessing implications of the
Sardar Sarovar Dam
The Sardar Sarovar Dam is a concrete gravity dam built on the Narmada River in Navagam near the town of Kevadiya, Narmada District, in the state of Gujarat, India. The dam was constructed to provide water and electricity to four Indian states ...
, a vast hydro and irrigation project in western India. His role in public inquiries and assessment of the impact of large scale developments on indigenous communities continued when he became Chairman of the Snake River Independent Review. This was a mediation between the
Idaho Power Company
Idaho Power Company (IPC) is a regulated electrical power utility. Its business involves the purchase, sale, generation, transmission and distribution of electricity in eastern Oregon and southern Idaho. It is a subsidiary of IDACORP, Inc. The c ...
and the
Nez Perce Tribe
The Nez Percé (; autonym in Nez Perce language: , meaning "we, the people") are an Indigenous people of the Plateau who are presumed to have lived on the Columbia River Plateau in the Pacific Northwest region for at least 11,500 years.Ames, K ...
of
Idaho
Idaho ( ) is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the Western United States. To the north, it shares a small portion of the Canada–United States border with the province of British Columbia. It borders the states of Montana and Wyom ...
in relation to the building of the
hydro dams on the
Snake River
The Snake River is a major river of the greater Pacific Northwest region in the United States. At long, it is the largest tributary of the Columbia River, in turn, the largest North American river that empties into the Pacific Ocean. The Snake ...
in the 1950s.
Since 1997, Brody has worked on projects in southern Africa. This began when he helped co-ordinate background research for the
‡Khomani San Land Claim in South Africa's southern
Kalahari
The Kalahari Desert is a large semi-arid sandy savanna in Southern Africa extending for , covering much of Botswana, and parts of Namibia and South Africa.
It is not to be confused with the Angolan, Namibian, and South African Namib coastal de ...
. This work led to filming many aspects of the claim, including its aftermath. In 2008, accompanied by the Canadian cinematographer Kirk Tougas, he filmed the beneficiaries of the claim as they reflected upon how it had changed their lives in the nine years since the claim was accepted. Working with the UK NGO Open Channels, and funded by the UK charity
Comic Relief
Comic relief is the inclusion of a humorous character, scene, or witty dialogue in an otherwise serious work, often to relieve tension.
Definition
Comic relief usually means a releasing of emotional or other tension resulting from a comic episo ...
, Brody also led projects with and for San in
Namibia
Namibia (, ), officially the Republic of Namibia, is a country in Southern Africa. Its western border is the Atlantic Ocean. It shares land borders with Zambia and Angola to the north, Botswana to the east and South Africa to the south and ea ...
and
Botswana
Botswana (, ), officially the Republic of Botswana ( tn, Lefatshe la Botswana, label=Setswana, ), is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. Botswana is topographically flat, with approximately 70 percent of its territory being the Kalahar ...
. The film work in South Africa led to the DVD ''Tracks Across Sand''
– four and a half hours of film edited by long-term collaborator Haida Paul shot in the course of land claims research,
oral history
Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people wh ...
and language research in the northern
Cape of South Africa.
Writer
As a writer, Brody has published many essays and a collection of short stories, as well as his non-fiction books. His collection of stories, ''Means of Escape'', was praised by
Doris Lessing
Doris May Lessing (; 22 October 1919 – 17 November 2013) was a British-Zimbabwean novelist. She was born to British parents in Iran, where she lived until 1925. Her family then moved to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where she remain ...
: "I recommend these tales to all connoisseurs of the short story, for they are unique in flavour and style, altogether unusual, and will stay in my memory like elegiac and lyrical songs or poems. Beautiful." The Canadian writer M. T. Kelly described the collection as "Intense, deeply felt, charged fiction...A masterful accomplishment". Brody has also written a number of screenplays, one of which, co-authored with
Michael Ignatieff
Michael Grant Ignatieff (; born May 12, 1947) is a Canadian author, academic and former politician who served as the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and Leader of the Official Opposition from 2008 until 2011. Known for his work as a histo ...
, became the film ''
Nineteen Nineteen''.
Canadian philosopher
George Woodcock
George Woodcock (; May 8, 1912 – January 28, 1995) was a Canadian writer of political biography and history, an anarchist thinker, a philosopher, an essayist and literary critic. He was also a poet and published several volumes of travel wri ...
described ''Maps and Dreams'' (1981) as "an impressive attempt to dispel popular errors about peoples whom anthropologists used condescendingly to call 'primitive hunters'. Brody is also seeking to prove that hunting economies can continue to be viable even in modern North America, and that the way of life associated with them is worth preserving."
In 2000, Brody published ''The Other Side of Eden: Hunter-Gatherers, Farmers and the Shaping of the World''. This is a book that puts together experience of and thinking about many of the fields of travel and anthropology that have been at the centre of Brody's work. It looks at the relationship between culture and language, the way the agricultural way of life is at the core of the mythic ideas of human universality to be found in
Genesis
Genesis may refer to:
Bible
* Book of Genesis, the first book of the biblical scriptures of both Judaism and Christianity, describing the creation of the Earth and of mankind
* Genesis creation narrative, the first several chapters of the Book of ...
, and the way hunting cultures have been wrongly identified as nomadic – pointing out that it is agriculture, with its inherent tendency to produce surplus population and propensity for
colonial expansion
Colonial or The Colonial may refer to:
* Colonial, of, relating to, or characteristic of a colony or colony (biology)
Architecture
* American colonial architecture
* French Colonial
* Spanish Colonial architecture
Automobiles
* Colonial (1920 au ...
and warfare, that is the most mobile of ways of life. ''The Other Side of Eden'' takes a very wide view of history and cultures, yet is rooted in closely observed anthropology, much of it from Brody's own field experience. A review in the New York Times termed it " an informed, passionate and enlightening volume…that adds new dimensions to our understanding of the diversity of human life.” Stephen Osborne writing in ''Geist'' described it as "a literary act: a work of deep imagination. It shows us the way into the heart of North America, a place that has barely been glimpsed by our leaders, our intellectuals, ourselves.”
Brody also wrote an article in 2020, ‘Beginning with Ireland’, in which he revisits his work in the West of Ireland, going back to both personal and methodological narratives, and seeing the roads that led from villages in rural Ireland to communities in the high Arctic and the Kalahari.
Filmmaker
In 1975, Brody's filmmaking began with his work for
ITV's
ITV is a British free-to-air public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom, public broadcast television network. It was launched in 1955 as Independent Television to provide competition to BBC Television (established in 1936). ITV is the ol ...
series ''
Disappearing World'', going with director
Michael Grigsby
Michael Kenneth Christian Grigsby (7 June 1936 – 12 March 2013) was an English documentary filmmaker.
With a filmography spanning six decades and nearly 30 films, Grigsby occupies a unique position in British documentary filmmaking, having w ...
to the Inuit community of Pond Inlet, where they made the film ''The People's Land, Eskimos of Pond Inlet''. This led to Brody directing documentaries, first in Canada (working with
First Nations
First Nations or first peoples may refer to:
* Indigenous peoples, for ethnic groups who are the earliest known inhabitants of an area.
Indigenous groups
*First Nations is commonly used to describe some Indigenous groups including:
**First Natio ...
in many parts of the country), as well as in the UK and Australia. These include the award-winning ''Hunters And Bombers'', a film that follows the
Innu
The Innu / Ilnu ("man", "person") or Innut / Innuat / Ilnuatsh ("people"), formerly called Montagnais from the French colonial period ( French for "mountain people", English pronunciation: ), are the Indigenous inhabitants of territory in the ...
resistance to low level flying in Labrador from
CFB Goose Bay
Canadian Forces Base Goose Bay , commonly referred to as CFB Goose Bay, is a Canadian Forces Base located in the municipality of Happy Valley-Goose Bay in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador. It is operated as an air force base by ...
. He also made ''On Indian Land'', a film with the
Gitksan
Gitxsan (also spelled Gitksan) are an Indigenous people in Canada whose home territory comprises most of the area known as the Skeena Country in English (: means "people of" and : means "the River of Mist"). Gitksan territory encompasses approxim ...
and
Wet'suwet'en of northern British Columbia, and ''Time Immemorial'', the opening film in the series ''As Long As The Rivers Flow''.
His film ''The Washing of Tears'' made with the
Mowachaht-Muchalaht people of
Gold River, on the west coast of
Vancouver Island
Vancouver Island is an island in the northeastern Pacific Ocean and part of the Canadian Provinces and territories of Canada, province of British Columbia. The island is in length, in width at its widest point, and in total area, while are o ...
, is an exploration of how one community looked to their fractured heritage to deal with extremes of dispossession and grief.
Hugh Brody and
Michael Ignatieff
Michael Grant Ignatieff (; born May 12, 1947) is a Canadian author, academic and former politician who served as the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and Leader of the Official Opposition from 2008 until 2011. Known for his work as a histo ...
's screenplay ''
1919
Events
January
* January 1
** The Czechoslovak Legions occupy much of the self-proclaimed "free city" of Pressburg (now Bratislava), enforcing its incorporation into the new republic of Czechoslovakia.
** HMY ''Iolaire'' sinks off the c ...
'' was filmed in 1983 and released in 1984. It explores history, memory and the place of psycho-analysis in an understanding of both the self and the 20th century.
John Berger
John Peter Berger (; 5 November 1926 – 2 January 2017) was an English art critic, novelist, painter and poet. His novel '' G.'' won the 1972 Booker Prize, and his essay on art criticism ''Ways of Seeing'', written as an accompaniment to the ...
, in his introduction to the
Faber and Faber
Faber and Faber Limited, usually abbreviated to Faber, is an independent publishing house in London. Published authors and poets include T. S. Eliot (an early Faber editor and director), W. H. Auden, Margaret Storey, William Golding, Samuel B ...
edition of the screenplay, wrote: "Nineteen Nineteen speaks directly to what we know about life, composed inextricably of the most intimate movements of the heart, accident, and the remorseless movement of history."
Philip French
Philip Neville French Order of the British Empire, OBE (28 August 1933 – 27 October 2015) was an English film critic and radio producer. French began his career in journalism in the late 1950s, before eventually becoming a BBC Radio prod ...
, reviewing the film for London's ''
Observer
An observer is one who engages in observation or in watching an experiment.
Observer may also refer to:
Computer science and information theory
* In information theory, any system which receives information from an object
* State observer in con ...
'' observed: "With ''Nineteen Nineteen'', cinema's relationship to psychoanalysis has come of age. This is the first great film about the subject." The film's cast included
Paul Scofield
David Paul Scofield (21 January 1922 – 19 March 2008) was a British actor. During a six-decade career, Scofield achieved the US Triple Crown of Acting, winning an Academy Awards, Academy Award, Emmy Award, Emmy, and Tony Award, Tony for his ...
,
Maria Schell
Maria Margarethe Anna Schell (15 January 1926 – 26 April 2005) was an Austrian-Swiss actress. She was one of the leading stars of German cinema in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1954, she was awarded the Cannes Best Actress Award for her performance ...
,
Diana Quick
Diana Marilyn Quick (born 23 November 1946) is an English actress.
Early life and family background
Quick was born on 23 November 1946 in London, England. She grew up in Dartford, Kent, the third of four children. Her father was Leonard Quic ...
,
Clare Higgins
Clare Frances Elizabeth Higgins (born 10 November 1955) is an English actress. Her film appearances include ''Hellraiser'' (1987),
'' The Worst Witch'' (2017 - 2020) '' Hellbound: Hellraiser II'' (1988), ''Small Faces'' (1996) and ''The Golden ...
and the young
Colin Firth
Colin Andrew Firth (born 10 September 1960) is an English actor and producer. He was identified in the mid-1980s with the " Brit Pack" of rising young British actors, undertaking a challenging series of roles, including leading roles in '' A M ...
.
Brody's films for British television include ''England's Henry Moore'', a project that was conceived by writer and political commentator
Anthony Barnett. It explores Barnett's exposition of the links between
Moore's work and the place of Britain in the world. In 2002–2003 Brody made ''Inside Australia'', a journey with
Antony Gormley
Sir Antony Mark David Gormley (born 30 August 1950) is a British sculptor. His works include the ''Angel of the North'', a public sculpture in Gateshead in the north of England, commissioned in 1994 and erected in February 1998; ''Another Pla ...
into the Australian western desert to follow the installation of one of Gormley's most notable pieces of work.
In 2005–2008, Brody made a film in a prison in British Columbia, ''The Meaning of Life'', in which he explores the use of aboriginal culture as a means of rehabilitation. At the centre of this film are accounts that inmates give of their lives and attempts at rehabilitation. In 2012, he finished work on a 4-hour DVD, ''Tracks Across Sand'', which shows in 17 segments the results of filming with the ‡Khomani San as they develop and then cope with their 1999 land claim.
In 2014, a large collection of materials gathered from the projects with the ‡Khomani San was deposited with the University of Cape Town Libraries and can be viewed on the digital collections website.
In 2017-18 worked with his son Tomo Brody on a set of films shot by Tomo in the Jungle refugee camp i
Calais including ''Human After All: Voices from Calais''
In 2018-19 worked with Tomo Brody on ''Crimes Against Children,'' a film about the impacts of boarding schools on Adivasi/Tribal children in India.
Personal life
Brody is married to the actress
Juliet Stevenson
Juliet Anne Virginia Stevenson, (born 30 October 1956) is an English actor of stage and screen. She is known for her role in the film ''Truly, Madly, Deeply'' (1991), for which she was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leadin ...
; they have two children. He also had two sons with his former partner, the dancer Miranda Tufnell.
BBC interview
In 2023 Brody was the guest on
BBC Radio 3
BBC Radio 3 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC. It replaced the BBC Third Programme in 1967 and broadcasts classical music and opera, with jazz, world music, Radio drama, drama, High culture, culture and the arts ...
's ''
Private Passions
''Private Passions'' is a weekly music discussion programme that has been running since 15 April 1995 on BBC Radio 3, presented by the composer Michael Berkeley. The production was formerly made by Classic Arts Productions, a British radio an ...
''.
Works
Filmography
*''The People's Land: Eskimos of Pond Inlet'' –
ITV: Granada, London, 1976 (research, collaboration with Mike Grigsby) 55 minutes.
*''A Conemara Family'' –
BBC #REDIRECT BBC #REDIRECT BBC #REDIRECT BBC
Here i going to introduce about the best teacher of my life b BALAJI sir. He is the precious gift that I got befor 2yrs . How has helped and thought all the concept and made my success in the 10th board ex ...
: Bristol / London, 1980 (research, collaboration with Melissal Llewelyn-Davis) 58 minutes.
*''Treaty 8 Country'' –
Treaty 8
Treaty 8, which concluded with the June 21, 1899 signing by representatives of the Crown and various First Nations of the Lesser Slave Lake area, is the most comprehensive of the one of eleven Numbered Treaties. The agreement encompassed a la ...
bands /
National Film Board of Canada
The National Film Board of Canada (NFB; french: Office national du film du Canada (ONF)) is Canada's public film and digital media producer and distributor. An agency of the Government of Canada, the NFB produces and distributes documentary f ...
(NFB) Vancouver, 1981 (director, collaboration with Anne Cubitt) 44 minutes.
*''People of the Islands'' –
Channel 4
Channel 4 is a British free-to-air public broadcast television network operated by the state-owned enterprise, state-owned Channel Four Television Corporation. It began its transmission on 2 November 1982 and was established to provide a four ...
: London, 1982 (director) 80 minutes.
*''1919'' –
British Film Institute
The British Film Institute (BFI) is a film and television charitable organisation which promotes and preserves film-making and television in the United Kingdom. The BFI uses funds provided by the National Lottery to encourage film production, ...
: London 1985 (co-writer, director). 90 minutes.
*''On Indian Land'' – GWTC: Hazelton, British Columbia / Channel 4: London, 1986 (co-producer, director) 54 minutes.
*''England's Henry Moore'' – Channel 4: London, 1988 (director) 65 minutes.
*''Hunters and Bombers'' – NFB: Montreal / Channel 4: London, 1990 (co-director) 56 minutes.
*''Time Immemorial'' – Tamarack: Toronto / NFB: Montreal, 1991 (director) 61 minutes.
*''A Washing of Tears'' – Nootka Sound & Picture Co./NFB: 1993 (director)
*''Cosmic Africa'' – directed by Craig Foster, Aland Pictures, Cosmos Films, IDC South Africa, 2002 (co-writer)
*''Inside Australia'' – Artemis Films International: 2004
*''The Meaning of Life'' – HR Brody Ltd: 2008
*''Tracks Across Sand'' – 2012 (director), a DVD containing sixteen films (total 4.5 hours) made as a community project with the ‡Khomani San of the Southern Kalahari.
Books
*''Gola: Life and Last Days of an Island Community'' (with F.H.A. Aalen). Cork: Mercier, 1969.
*''Indians on Skid Row''. Ottawa: NSRG, 1971.
*''Inishkillane: Change and Decline in the West of Ireland''. London: Allen Lane, 1973, Penguin, 1974, Norman & Hobhouse, 1981, Faber & Faber, 1986; New York: Schocken, 1975; Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1981.
*''The People's Land''. London and Toronto: Penguin, 1975, 1977, 1983; New York: Penguin, 1977; Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1991 (with new introduction).
*''Maps and Dreams''. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. 1981, 1988 (with new introduction); London: Norman & Hobhouse, 1981, Faber & Faber, 1986. London and Toronto: Penguin, 1983; New York: Pantheon, 1983. (Reissued Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, 1998)
*''Nineteen Nineteen'' (with Michael Ignatieff). London: Faber & Faber, 1985.
*''Living Arctic''. London: Faber & Faber, 1987; Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1990.
*''Means of Escape''. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1991; London: Faber & Faber, 1991.
*''The Other Side of Eden: Hunters, Farmers and the Shaping of the World''. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre / London: Faber and Faber / New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2000. Paperback: Canada, 2001, UK and USA, 2002. Dutch, Chinese and Japanese translations, 2002-3
*Landscapes of Silence: from Childhood to the Arctic, London, Toronto and New York: Faber and Faber, 2022.
Essays
* ''Inuit Land Use and Occupancy'' and ''Inummarit, The Real People''
* ''Industrial Impact in the Canadian North''
* ''Eskimo: A Language With a Future?''
* ''Continuity and Change: The Inuit and Settlers of Labrador''
* ''Alcohol'' – ''Études Inuit''
* ''Jim's Journey''
* ''On Indian Land:The Gitksan-Wet'suwet'en''
* Introduction to ''Stikine,The Great River'',
* ''The Power of the Image'' – in ''Imaging the Arctic''
* ''Nomads And Settlers''
* ''Taking the Words from their Mouths''
* Introduction to ''Seasons of the Arctic'' photographs by
Paul Nicklen
Paul Nicklen (born July 21, 1968) is an acclaimed Canadian photographer, film-maker, author and marine biologist.
Early life
Paul Nicklen was born on July 21, 1968, in Tisdale, Saskatchewan, Canada. By the mid-seventies, Paul's family - made ...
,
* ''In conversation with Hugh Brody'', interview by
Eleanor Wachtel
Eleanor Wachtel (born 1947 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian writer and broadcaster. She is the host of the flagship literary show '' Writers & Company'' on CBC Radio One, which celebrated its 25th anniversary in October 2015. Her interviews fo ...
,
* ''Atanarjuat – the fast runner'', a discussion of
Zacharias Kunuk
Zacharias Kunuk ( iu, ᓴᖅᑲᓕᐊᓯ ᑯᓄᒃ, born November 27, 1957) is a Canadian Inuk producer and director most notable for his film '' Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner'', the first Canadian dramatic feature film produced entirely in Inukt ...
's film
* ''Inside Lake Ballard'' – in Antony Gormley's ''Inside Australia''
* Foreword to Robert Semeniuk's ''Among the Inuit''
* ''Without Stories We Are Lost'' – in
The Journals of Knud Rasmussen
''The Journals of Knud Rasmussen'' is a 2006 Canadian-Danish film directed by Zacharias Kunuk and Norman Cohn. The film is about the pressures on traditional Inuit shamanistic beliefs as documented by Knud Rasmussen during his travels across the Ca ...
* ''Stations of Life'', an essay about inequality
* ''The anthropology of ourselves'' – in
Anthony Gormley's One And Other: The Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square
* ''Gaddafi and the Tuareg''
* ''1 December 1961: Fly the Flag of Independence''
* Guest editorial for'' Irish Journal of Anthropology.'' ''‘Permanence and Transition – Anthropological Perspectives''
* Foreword to ''Woodsmoke and Leafcups'', ''Autobiographical footnotes to the anthropology of the Durwa'' by the Indian botanical anthropologist Madhu Ramnath.
* With Peter Usher, Obituary of the late Jim Lotz '' Arctic, Arctic Institute of North America''
'
* ''
'Messages’,'' in Antony Gormley: ''Field for the British Isles''
* 'A Story of Arctic Maps’'','' in ''Groundwork: Writings on Places and People,''
* 'The People’s Land—The Film’ an essay in: The Hands' Measure: Essays Honouring Leah Aksaajuq Otak's Contribution to Arctic Science'
* ‘''What were we mapping? From the Inuit Land Use and Occupancy Project to the Southern Kalahari’.'' In: ''Mapping the Unmappable? Cartographic Explorations with Indigenous Peoples in Africa
''
Nominations, awards, and honours
* 1991:
Catholic Film Critics Award winner for ''Hunters and Bombers''
[Hugh Brody](_blank)
at the Internet Movie Database
* 1985:
Golden Bear
The Golden Bear (german: Goldener Bär) is the highest prize awarded for the best film at the Berlin International Film Festival. The bear is the heraldic animal of Berlin, featured on both the coat of arms and flag of Berlin.
History
The winn ...
award nomination at the
35th Berlin International Film Festival
The 35th annual Berlin International Film Festival was held from 15 to 26 February 1985. The Golden Bear was awarded to East German film ''Die Frau und der Fremde'' directed by Rainer Simon and British film ''Wetherby'' directed by David Hare. ...
for ''1919''
References
External links
Hugh Brody official websiteBrody's archive of footage of the ‡Khomani San, at the University of Cape Town
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brody, Hugh
1943 births
Living people
Alumni of Trinity College, Oxford
British anthropologists
Anthropology writers
Anthropology educators
British film directors
British non-fiction writers
Canada Research Chairs
British male writers
Male non-fiction writers
Academic staff of the University of the Fraser Valley