Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780253070142 Academic Inspection Copy

Introduction to Documentary, Fourth Edition

Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview
The fourth edition of Bill Nichols's best-selling text provides new critical material on reenactments, encounter, and testimony or bearing witness. Introduction to Documentary is designed for students in any field that makes use of visual evidence and persuasive strategies. It identifies the genre's distinguishing qualities and teaches the viewer how to read documentary film. Each chapter takes up a discrete question, from "How Did Documentary Filmmaking Get Started?" to "How Have Documentaries Responded to Identity Politics and Social Issues?" Here Nichols, with Jaimie Baron, has edited each chapter for clarity and ease of use and expanded the book with updates and new ideas.
Bill Nichols is Professor Emeritus of Cinema at San Francisco State University. He is author of Representing Reality: Issues and Concepts in Documentary; Blurred Boundaries: Questions of Meaning in Contemporary Culture; Engaging Cinema: An Introduction to Film Studies; and Speaking Truths with Film: Evidence, Ethics, Politics in Documentary. He is also editor of Movies and Methods, Volumes I and II.Jaimie Baron is Lecturer in Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. She is author of The Archive Effect: Found Footage and the Audiovisual Experience of History and Reuse, Misuse, Abuse: The Ethics of Audiovisual Appropriation in the Digital Era as well as many journal articles, book chapters, essays, and reviews. She is founder and director of the Festival of (In)appropriation, a yearly international festival of short experimental found-footage films and videos. She is also a cofounder and coeditor of Docalogue, an online space for scholars and filmmakers to engage in conversations about contemporary documentary, and the Docalogue book series. She is a 2022-23 recipient of a Harvard Radcliffe Fellowship.
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. How Can We Define Documentary Film? 2. What Are the Constituent Elements of Documentary Film? 3. What Ethical Issues Arise in Documentary Filmmaking? 4. What Characterizes the Voice of Documentary and Its Relation to Storytelling? 5. What Are the Rhetorical and Poetic Contributions to Documentary? 6. How Did Documentary Filmmaking Get Started? 7. How Has Documentary Represented the Past? 8. What Are the Expository and Performative Modes of Documentary? 9. What Are the Observational and Participatory Modes of Documentary? 10. What Are the Poetic and Reflexive Modes of Documentary? 11. How Did the Nation-State Affect Documentary's Approach to Social Issues? 12. How Have Documentaries Responded to Identity Politics and Social Issues? 13. How Can We Write Effectively about Documentary Films? 14. I Want to Make a Documentary. How Do I Start? Suggestions for Further Reading Index
"Since its first edition in 2001, Bill Nichols' Introduction to Documentary is the leading textbook on nonfictional cinema. Not exactly a how-to-do guide, a history of documentaries, or an assessment of the specific ethical and aesthetic issues of this production, Nichols's book became an instant classic discussing all of this with clarity and originality for the beginner and the academic, the filmmaker and the viewer. Each part organically updated with new questions and filmic variations, its fourth edition, co-written with Jaimie Baron, offers an even more complex and current approach to the essential book that has been guiding us through the mist of documentary film."-Amir Labaki, author of Introduction to Brazilian Documentary "In Introduction to Documentary, Bill Nichols created the first comprehensive taxonomy of documentary film form-one that has given generations of students and scholars a critical language with which they can critically analyze and understand the many complex forms of documentary film. This fourth edition, now joined by scholar Jaimie Baron, uses the latest films from mainstream to the avant-garde to analyze ever-evolving documentary film practices in relation to recent theoretical debates including relationships between fact and fiction, the ethics of representation, point of view, new technologies, and hybrid forms. Written with clarity and generosity, the volume is an essential resource for film and media students, scholars and filmmakers alike."-Jeffrey Skoller, editor of Postwar: The Films of Daniel Eisenberg
Google Preview content