TUT Film guru and lecturer publishes article on award-winning Lesotho film

19 February 2021

The Tshwane University of Technology’s Department of Visual Communication at the Faculty of Arts and Design, has started the New Year with a range of published articles by its talented staff pool. The most recent is an in-depth news article by Film lecturer, Dr Anna-Marie Jansen van Vuuren, on an award-winning Lesotho film that has been published in The Conversation. 

Film guru and lecturer at the Department of Visual Communication’s Film programme, Dr Anna-Marie Jansen van Vuuren. Photo: Courtesy of RSG (SABC).

The Conversation represents a growing community of more than 120 500 academics and researchers from 3 887 institutions across the globe. It is funded by the National Research Foundation (NRF), eight universities, and hosted by the Universities of the Witwatersrand and Western Cape, the African Population and Health Research Centre, and the Nigerian Academy of Science. 

Dr Jansen van Vuuren says since its premiere at the 2019 Venice International Film Festival, the film on which the article is based, This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection, has been touring the world’s film festivals. “Everywhere it goes it attracts critical praise and awards – over 25 of them now. At the Sundance Film Festival, it won a special jury award for visionary filmmaking for its Director, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese. It is the first Lesotho film ever to have been included in the foreign-language category or Best Foreign Film category of the Academy Awards,” she adds.

Dr Jansen van Vuuren is an emerging researcher in the field of South African Cinema, with a keen interest in historical films, myth, and Afrikaner identity. 

She completed her practice-led PhD in Creative Writing, Screenwriting and Film Studies at the University of Pretoria, supervised by Hertzog-prize winner, Professor Henning Pieterse. It consisted of writing a feature film screenplay, whilst her thesis centred on the ideological representation of the hero in South African Anglo-Boer War case studies. 

Her current research includes the history of South African cinema; the role of representation and ideology within South African Film identities; and the role of landscape in film.

She is also a film critic and for the latter has won two ATKV-Mediaveertjie awards in the category Best insert for a radio journal and current affairs show. In 2014, she headed up the jury for the Independent Mzanzi Film Festival in Pretoria, in 2017, she formed part of the jury for the Cape Town International Film Festival, and is a full member of the Writers' Guild of South Africa (WGSA). 

To access her article, titled This award-winning Lesotho film also has social justice at heart, please click on https://theconversation.com/this-award-winning-lesotho-film-also-has-social-justice-at-heart-154204


For more information on the Tshwane University of Technology, please contact Willa de Ruyter, Corporate Affairs and Marketing.
Tel: +27 12 382 5352   Email: deruyterw@tut.ac.za