Documentary Resistance: Social Change and Participatory Media offers a new approach to understanding the networked capacity of documentary media to create public commons areas, crafting connections between unlikely interlocutors. In this process communities invest in the exchange of documentary moving image discourse around politics and social change. This book advances a new argument suggesting that documentary's capacity for social change is found in its ability to establish forms of collective identification and political agency capable of producing and sustaining activist media cultures. It advances the creation of a conceptual, theoretical, and historical space in which documentary and social change can be examined, drawing upon research in cinema, media, and communication studies as well as cultural theory to explore how political ideas move into participatory action. This book takes a distinctive approach, understanding how struggles for social justice are located, reflected, and represented on the documentary screen, but also in pre- and post-production processes. To address this living history, this project includes over sixty unpublished field interviews with documentary filmmakers, critics, funders, activists, and distributors.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
An extraordinary trove of social justice documentaries receive passionate discussion in this far-sighted work. Scrutinizing work on everything from abortion to police violence, Aguayo pursues her case for a new understanding of what it means to achieve social impact. She shows how a multitude of voices ring out across the country in ways our mainstream media simply does not hear. * Bill Nichols, author of Introduction to Documentary, 3rd Edition, and Representing Reality: Issues and Concepts in Documentary * With clarity, panache, power, and urgency, Documentary Resistance forcefully and unconditionally intervenes into a discipline absorbed with the neoliberalism of auteurs and aesthetics. It unfurls a trenchant historical and political probe into documentary agency, collective identities, and social change across a wide range of documentary modes engaging labor, reproductive rights, and the racialization of police brutality. Compelling and field-redefining, Aguayo argues that the political materialities and micro-practices of production cultures and media circulation across emerging technologies and platforms can open up spaces for empathy, community-building, and a documentary public commons. Documentary Resistance resolutely insists social movements confronting injustice constitute the necessary starting point for documentary theories and practices. * Patricia R. Zimmermann, Ithaca College *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 235 mm
Breite: 156 mm
Dicke: 18 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-19-067621-6 (9780190676216)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Angela J. Aguayo is Associate Professor of Cinema and Digital Culture at Southern Illinois University. She is scholar and media maker whose practice reflects an interdisciplinary approach to documentary, media studies, rhetoric, and critical cultural theory. Her most recent work is focused on agency, collective identification and participatory media cultures, investigating the possibilities for documentary to engage the process of social change. She is also an award winning writer, director and producer of mutiple documentary shorts utilized in community engagement campaigns as well as screening at festivals and museums around the world.
Autor*in
Associate Professor of Cinema and Digital CultureAssociate Professor of Cinema and Digital Culture, Southern Ililinois University