Africa (2013)

Africa (2013)
10 / 10

Africa is the BBC natural history television series narrated by David Attenborough. The series was produced by the BBC Natural History Unit in Bristol with James Honeyborne as the series producer and originally aired on BBC One between January and February 2013. The six-episode series provides thorough documentation of African continental wildlife, ecosystems, and the specific organisms that inhabit them. Each episode runs approximately sixty minutes (longer than the standard fifty-minute Attenborough episode format). The six episodes are: “Kalahari,” “Savannah,” “Congo,” “Cape,” “Sahara,” and “The Future.” The series covers approximately one hundred species across the African continent. The score was composed by Will Gregory and Sarah Class.

The series was produced over four years and represented the first major Attenborough production focused on a single continent. Africa is consistently cited among the major natural history productions of the early 2010s. The series’s specific focus allowed thorough treatment of African environments at depth that geographically broader series could not provide. The Congo rainforest material, the Kalahari desert documentation, and the closing episode’s environmental and conservation material all represent substantial individual contributions. The series’s specific approach to African wildlife documentation also engaged with the complicated legacy of European natural history programming about Africa, which had often presented the continent through colonial frameworks that subsequent decades have reassessed.

The Continental Focus

The series’s structural commitment was to thorough documentation of a single continent. Previous Attenborough series had typically organized content around evolutionary, habitat, or taxonomic frameworks. Africa applied the geographic framework directly. Each episode covered specific African regions (Kalahari, Savannah, Congo, Cape, Sahara) and documented the specific ecosystems within each region. The audience experiences the continent through its distinct major environments.

The framework allows depth that broader geographic scopes cannot accommodate. African wildlife has been documented extensively across many previous natural history productions, but typically as components of larger global productions. Africa’s continental focus allowed thorough coverage of African ecosystems including environments that previous productions had covered only briefly. The Cape episode’s documentation of African penguin colonies and Cape Floral Kingdom plant communities is more extensive than any previous Attenborough production had provided. The technique demonstrates how appropriate scope decisions can deliver content that broader scopes cannot include. Continental focus is one valid scope. Other valid scopes include global, regional, and habitat-specific. Each scope produces different work.

For Writers

Appropriate scope decisions deliver content that broader or narrower scopes cannot include. Africa’s continental focus allowed depth on African ecosystems that global productions could not provide. The lesson applies to nonfiction at any scale. Match the scope to the depth you want to achieve. Broader scope produces wider context. Narrower scope produces specific depth. Both are valid. Pick deliberately rather than defaulting to the standard scope your subject area typically uses.

The Camera Trap Innovation

The series deployed remote camera trap systems on a scale never tried for natural history programming. Camera traps had been used in scientific research for decades but had not been extensively deployed in major broadcast natural history. The Africa production used motion-triggered remote cameras to document wildlife behavior in locations where human presence would have prevented natural behavior or where direct filming was impractical.

The camera trap material produced specific content that direct filming could not have captured. The Congo episode includes camera trap footage of forest elephants, bongo antelopes, and other species that human-crewed cinematography rarely documents because of the species’s specific shyness around human observers. The Sahara episode includes camera trap material on nocturnal desert predators. The audience receives footage that the species’s actual behavior had previously concealed from thorough documentation. The technique demonstrates how new technical approaches can address documentary access limitations that previous methods could not overcome. The camera trap material has become standard in subsequent BBC natural history production. Africa’s deployment of the technique established the production-quality expectations that subsequent series have continued to develop.

For Writers

New methodological approaches can address documentary access limitations that previous methods could not overcome. Africa’s camera trap deployment documented species that human-crewed cinematography rarely captures. The lesson applies to nonfiction work generally. Some subjects evade direct observation. The writer’s presence changes what happens. New approaches (electronic monitoring, archival research, distributed observation networks) can document subjects that direct observation cannot effectively access. Identify the access barriers. Develop the methods that work around them.

The Drought Material

The series’s third episode (“Congo”) includes extensive coverage of the 2012 East African drought that occurred during production. The drought affected substantial portions of the production’s filming areas. The series adapted to document the drought’s specific impacts on wildlife rather than attempting to maintain a planned production schedule that the drought had made impossible.

The drought material extends across multiple sequences. The Savannah episode documents specific elephant family responses to water scarcity. The Cape episode covers fynbos plant community responses to fire and drought cycles. The closing episode (“The Future”) explicitly addresses the broader pattern of African environmental change. The technique demonstrates how documentary work can adapt to actual conditions rather than maintaining rigid commitment to planned content. The drought was the actual situation during production. The series documented the actual situation. The result is more honest than a drought-free production would have been. The willingness to document difficult conditions rather than to film around them produces work that captures actual reality rather than constructed scenarios.

For Writers

Documentary work can adapt to actual conditions rather than maintaining rigid commitment to planned content. Africa documented the 2012 East African drought when the drought made the original production plan impractical. The lesson is that the actual situation is often more meaningful than the planned situation. When circumstances change, the writing can change with them. The version that emerges from responding to actual conditions often contains material that the planned version would have missed. Stay flexible. The unexpected material is sometimes the most important material.

Craft Note

The black rhino courtship sequence in episode one (“Kalahari”) demonstrates the series’s specific approach to species whose behavior had been minimally documented. The footage shows black rhinos at a desert water hole during night hours, when the species is most active. The camera trap and infrared cinematography document specific courtship and territorial behaviors that human-crewed daytime cinematography could not have captured. The sequence runs approximately five minutes. The audience experiences black rhino social behavior at the time of day when it actually occurs. The species’s specific endangered status (the black rhino population had declined approximately ninety-six percent between 1960 and 1995) gives the documentation specific conservation significance. Each individual rhino documented represents a significant fraction of the remaining global population. The technique demonstrates how documentary work can contribute conservation value through the documentation itself. The black rhino sequence is among the most-cited individual passages on contemporary African endangered species in natural history television.

The Verdict

10/10. One of the major BBC natural history productions of the early 2010s and the foundational text for continent-focused natural history documentation. The continental focus, the camera trap innovation, the drought material, and the black rhino sequence all earn the series’s standing. Watch the complete six-episode series. Africa operates as thorough contemporary African wildlife documentation and as evidence that continent-focused scope can support major natural history production.


FAQ

How many episodes?

Six episodes covering different African regions. Each episode runs approximately sixty minutes (longer than the standard Attenborough fifty-minute format).

Why focus on Africa?

African wildlife had been extensively documented across previous natural history productions but typically as components of larger global series. The continental focus allowed thorough depth that previous productions had not provided.

Is the camera trap material significant?

Yes. The deployment scale had not been tried in natural history broadcasting. The technique produced footage that human-crewed cinematography could not have captured.

How does the climate change material compare to Frozen Planet?

Africa’s environmental material is integrated throughout rather than concentrated in a single closing episode. The drought documentation provides specific contemporary climate change context across multiple episodes.

How accurate is the ecological content?

The basic content remains current. Subsequent research has refined specific details and African environments have continued to change since 2013, but the series’s content continues to align with ecological understanding.

What about production scale?

The series required four years of production across multiple African locations. The scale matched the BBC Natural History Unit template for landmark productions.

Should I watch this?

Yes. Africa is required viewing for African natural history and for understanding what continent-focused documentation can accomplish.

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