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Original Articles

The origins and early development of the National Film Library: 1929–1936

Pages 199-217 | Published online: 03 Jan 2014

References

  • Bioscope (1911), ‘Plea for a National Film Museum’, The Bioscope, 13th April 1911.
  • Bottomore, Stephen (1999), ‘Will Day: The story of rediscovery’, Film Studies, 1: Spring issue, pp. 81–91.
  • British Film Institute (1933a), Minutes of the Board of Governors Designate, 21st September 1933, London: British Film Institute.
  • British Film Institute (1933b), Minutes of the Board of Governors, 5th October 1933, London: British Film Institute.
  • British Film Institute (1933c), Minutes of the Deputation to the General Postmaster, 15th November 1933, London: British Film Institute.
  • British Film Institute (1934), Minutes of the Board of Governors: 12th July 1934, London: British Film Institute.
  • British Film Institute (1935a), The National Film Library: Its Work and Requirements, Leaflet No.8, London: British Film Institute, 10 pp.
  • British Film Institute (1935b), Second Annual Report, Year Ended 30 June 1935, London: British Film Institute.
  • British Film Institute (1937), Fourth Annual Report, Year Ended 30 June 1937, London: British Film Institute.
  • Commission on Educational and Cultural Films (1932), The Film in National Life, London: George Allen and Unwin.
  • Copyright Act 1911, Section 15, HMSO, 1911.
  • Film Library Committee (1935), Final Report (Unpublished report incorporating Memorandum on a National Film Library and A National Film Library: Memorandum 2). London: British Film Institute. British Film Institute Paper Archive, Box A-11, File 4, Special Collections, BFI National Library, London.
  • Houston, Penelope (1994), Keepers of the Frame: The Film Archives, London: British Film Institute.
  • Lambert, R.S. (1940), Ariel and All His Quality, London: Gollancz.
  • Lindgren, Ernest (1935), ‘A National Film Library for Great Britain’, Sight and Sound, 4: 4, Summer issue, pp. 66–68.
  • Lindgren, Ernest (1948), ‘The importance of film archives’, Penguin Film Review, 5, pp. 47–52.
  • Low, Rachael (1979), ‘Appendix: The British Film Institute’, in: Rachel Low (ed.), The History of the British Film, 1929–1939: Documentary and Educational Films of the 1930s, London: Allen & Unwin, pp. 182–199.
  • National Film Library (1936a), The National Film Library presents: Cinema 1896–1915, from Lumière to D.W. Griffiths, a programme of early silent films at the Polytechnic cinema, Regent Street, Friday 21st February 1936 at 10.30 am, (programme note). British Film Institute Paper Archive, Box 15, Special Collections, BFI National Library, London.
  • National Film Library (1936b), National Film Library Catalogue, London: British Film Institute.
  • National Film Library (1938), George Méliès 1861–1938, Arranged by the National Film Library of the British Film Institute, by courtesy of Ifan Kyrle Fletcher, at 26 Old Bond Street, London W1, from May 24th to June 2nd, 1938 (exhibition booklet). British Film Institute Paper Archive, Box 44, Special Collections, BFI National Library, London.
  • Tallents, Stephen (1935), Notes of the meeting between R.S. Lambert, Mr. Robinson and Sir Stephen Talents at the Treasury, 4th April 1935, signed by Sir Stephen Tallents. File T 162/1001. National Archives, London.

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