Fig. 1: Prof. Dr. Eibl-Eibesfeldt filming
in the field in Papua New Guinea. The Eipo mother and her child were as
interested in my behaviuor as I in theirs.
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During the second half
of the 1960s Prof. Dr. Irenaeus Eibl-Eibesfeldt and Prof. Dr. Hans Hass
developed a comparative approach to Human behaviour recording unstaged
and undisturbed social interactions of everyday life, rituals and other
activities on film and tone documents. For these cross-cultural studies
a number of traditional societies with different subsistence strategies
were selected for our documentations to provide us with informations on
behaviour in societies with different kinds of human social organisation.
They have been selected to represent a wide a geographical range as possible:
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The cross cultural approach to human behaviour was initiated in pilot studies in the 1960s. Systematic documentation began in 1969. Until January 2002, a total of 279.699 kilometres of 16 mm-film and 3371,47 ( correspond to 38457,83 meters) minutes of videofilm (Mini DV, Hi 8, S-VHS) has been recorded. In the majority of cases film documents are accompanied by a sound track. This makes the Film Archive of Human Ethology the most extensive documentation of human behaviour world-wide. In contrast to the variety of ethnological or anthropological films, which in most cases deal with performed activities, the Film Archive of Human Ethology mainly records unstaged and minimally disturbed social behaviour. In order to achieve such records, the right-angle reflex lens technique was employed, as developed by Prof. Dr. Hans Hass. This permits the photographer to film subjects without pointing the camera at them (Figs. 1 and 2). |
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The archives are housed in the former Research Institute of Human Ethology in Andechs near Munich which is associated with the nearby Max-Planck-Institute for Behavioural Physiology in Seewiesen. Strict guidelines have been laid down aimed at preserving the uncut original documents for future generations of scientists. The availability of this primary documentation is another methodological advantage of the Film Archive of Human Ethology, since most ethnological films have been subjected to potential manipulation through being edited and cut. Together with some old ethnological or anthropological films (e.g. The HADDON Archive) the older films of our Archive offer unique and unreproducible documentation of traditional societies, because some of the recorded societies have been subject to strong enculturation. The original unedited records provide opportunities for various interdisciplinary analyses of human behaviour. Until now only a few selected elements of human behaviour have been fully analysed by our local and fellow researchers (publications of the Film Archive). So there is plenty of virgin material that would reward further investigation. |
Fig. 2: Camera with dummy lens placed in front of the true lens showing the side window for the right-angle reflex lense. The technique was developed by Prof. Dr. Hans Hass. Photography by Renate Krell. |
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Up to 1998 as many as 234 films on Human Ethology and Ethnology have been published based on the Archive's resources (published films) in co-operation with the IWF Knowledge and Media in Goettingen, Germany and most recently with the Federal Austrian Institute for Scientific Film (Österreichisches Bundesinstitut fuer den Wissenschaftlichen Film, ÖWF) in Vienna, Austria. Most of the published films were included in the Encyclopaedia Cinematographica (EC) of the IWF, either because they met the rigid standards for scientific documentation or because they were judged to be of great importance for the scientific community. Each of these films documents a certain scene in such detail that it could be used as a source in further research and education. The films are accompanied by publications in which the verbal interactions and songs are transcribed and all important side information is collated. The reconditioning of our large film and sound resources are far from being complete. By November 1997, another 21 films were offered and accepted at the EC of the IWF in Goettingen. Due to the emphasis placed on collecting this priceless record over the years, only half of the published films are so far accompanied by publications. In addition there is a need to improve the archiving of our documents. No scientific work on the uncut material should touch the valuable originals (sources). Therefore 1:1 copies (work copies) have to be prepared. Due to the early "birth" of our Film Archives more than two decades ago, computer-based indexing is not yet available. In order to increase the effectiveness of the scientific use of the Archives, in 1994 we began developing a computer index for the original documents. For the use of the Archives in future it is essentially to integrate all important information (subject names, demographic data, traditional genealogical relationships, behavioural keywords etc.) on each scene of the films into a database to enable complex inquiries (database and search engine). Only after this database is complete will the full potential of the Archive become available online to foreign scientists and institutions. In the meantime using the Archives requires the assistance of a handful of people who have worked with it over many years. We estimate that at least 4 years
will be necessary to accomplish the indexing of the large resources of
the Archive of Human Ethology, if we could hire enough skilled ethologists
for this purpose. Due to the chronic shortage of funding and the fact that
our director Prof. Dr. Eibl-Eibesfeldt reached retirement age on June 30
1996, the Senate of the Max-Planck-Society (Max-Planck-Gesellschaft,
MPG) decided to close down the Research Institute of Human Ethology,
which had financed the documentation, evaluation and publication of our
films in co-operation with the IWF. We are very pleased by the fact that
the MPG offered Prof. Dr. Eibl-Eibesfeldt an emeritus-working place including
the rooms of the Archive for a few years, to enable completion of the ongoing
scientific evaluations and the indexing of the archive. Unfortunately this
support alone could not finance the time and human resources needed to
index the Archive. In this desperate situation the Volkswagen Foundation
(Volkswagenstiftung)
recognized the importance of the Archives of Human Ethology and saved our
database project for at least the next two years.
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