Photographer Edward Curtis's 1914 orchestrally scored melodrama In the
Land of the Head Hunters was one of the first US films to feature an
Indigenous cast. This landmark of early silent cinema was an
intercultural product of Curtis's collaboration with the Kwakwa̱ka̱'wakw
of British Columbia--meant, like Curtis's photographs, to document a
supposedly vanishing race. But as this collection shows, the epic film
is not simply an artifact of colonialist nostalgia.
In recognition of the film's centennial, and the release of a restored
version, Return to the Land of the Head Hunters brings together
leading anthropologists, Native American authorities, artists,
musicians, literary scholars, and film historians to reassess the film
and its legacy. The volume offers unique Kwakwa̱ka̱'wakw perspectives on
the film, accounts of its production and subsequent circulation, and
evaluations of its depictions of cultural practice. Resituated within
film history and informed by a legacy of Kwakwa̱ka̱'wakw participation and
response, the movie offers dynamic evidence of ongoing cultural survival
and transformation under shared conditions of modernity.