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film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
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RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
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RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
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Films
found one film
Directors
“Carr, Peter”
x
films with a digital version
1
Region
Western Mediterranean
1
Country
Spain
1
Keywords
Collective / Community identity
1
Herding
1
Rural
1
Directors
Carr, Peter
1
x
Series
Disappearing World Series
1
Country of production
United Kingdom
1
Year of production
1989
1
Film
The Villagers of Sierra de Gredos
1989
52
‘
Directed by
Peter Carr
.
The 130 villagers of Navalguijo in the Sierra de Gredos of Central Spain live in a village perched high in the mountains and they face an extreme climate with very cold winters and hot summers. The soil is acid and poor, and the steep slopes and short growing season mean that agriculture cannot provide a living. Collectively the villagers own summer pastures high in the mountains, and individually they hold smaller autumn pastures. With access to winter pastures across the mountains in the region of Extremadura, they are able to maintain a large herd of beef cattle, which form their main source of wealth and which are their dearest possessions. To make this film, the crew joined the village men on their trek to Extremadura, when they drive their cattle down the mountains. This cattle drive is a mixture of hard work and holiday, with passing round of leather wine bottles, story-telling and evening stopovers at favourite inns punctuating the long march. This film portrays a society whose ideals of village co-operation and the rigid and efficient organisation of tasks have given the village a strong sense of identity over generations. It remains to be seen if this sense of identity survives the breakdown of their isolation from the outside world as tourists discover ‘hidden Spain’ and better communications and roads bring increasing contact with the rest of the country.
Western Mediterranean
Herding
Rural
Collective / Community identity
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Dr Cai Hua – Royal Anthropological Institute
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