"Joshua Glick and Patricia Aufderheide Over the past twenty years, documentaries have taken on an increasingly central place in American public life. One measure of their importance is their commercial value. Major media companies have moved aggressively to monetize documentary, exploiting the form's relatively low budgets (compared to fiction)"--
"Joshua Glick and Patricia Aufderheide Over the past twenty years, documentaries have taken on an increasingly central place in American public life. One measure of their importance is their commercial value. Major media companies have moved aggressively to monetize documentary, exploiting the form's relatively low budgets (compared to fiction)"--
The Oxford Handbook of American Documentary offers new approaches to the study of documentary produced within, or connected to, the United States. Leading scholars of nonfiction and emerging voices in the field examine documentary as a dynamic cultural form that draws on wide-ranging technologies, coheres around different representational modes, and is used for a variety of artistic, political, and entertainment purposes. A pressing concern of many of thisvolume's authors - like many of the filmmakers they write about - is documentary's ability to not just reach viewers, but to actively engage them in building a more equitable and just world.This volume's twenty-six essays place the act of documentary making within a broader historical context, including macro-level analysis of how policy initiatives or economic shifts impact filmmakers as well as granular attention to how participants of a social movement use film to galvanize support for a cause. Additionally, The Oxford Handbook of American Documentary addresses the ways in which the stylistic tropes and rhetorical conventions of documentary are used tomanipulate for political power or profit.
Joshua Glick, is Visiting Associate Professor of Film & Electronic Arts, Bard CollegeJoshua Glick is Associate Professor of Film & Electronic Arts at Bard College. He is the author of Los Angeles Documentary and the Production of Public History. He also co-curated the exhibition, Deepfake: Unstable Evidence on Screen, at the Museum of the Moving Image in New York. Professor Glick's current book project explores how documentary on the left and right of the political spectrum reshaped the media industries and created oppositionalvisions of social change in an era of polarization.Patricia Aufderheide is University Professor in the School of Communication at American University. Among her many published works are Kartemquin Films: Documentaries on the Frontlines of Democracy, Documentary Film: A Very Short Introduction and Reclaiming Fair Use (with Peter Jaszi). She has been a Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellow, and among her awards are the International Communication Association's Communication Research as an Agent of ChangeAward and the International Documentary Association's Preservation and Scholarship Award.
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