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Documentary Screens : Nonfiction Film and Television

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Documentary productions encompass remarkable representations of surprising realities.

How do documentaries achieve their ends? What types of documentaries are there? What factors are implicated in their production? Such questions animate this engaging study. Documentary Screens provides a comprehensive and critical introduction to the formal features and histories of central categories of documentary film and television.

Among the categories examined are autobiographical, indigenous and ethnographic documentary, compilation films, direct cinema and cinema verite and television documentary journalism.

The book also considers recent so called popular factual entertainment and the future of documentary film, television and new media.

This provocative and accessible analysis situates wide ranging examples from each category within the larger material forces which impact on documentary form and content.

The important connection between form, content and context explored in the book constitutes a new and lively 'documentary studies' approach to documentary representation.

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Product Details
Red Globe Press
0333741161 / 9780333741160
Hardback
070.18
28/05/2004
United Kingdom
English
viii, 276 p.
23 cm
academic/professional/technical Learn More
KEITH BEATTIE teaches courses of film and media within the contemporary humanities program of the University of Queensland. He is the author of The Scar that Binds (New York University Press, 1998), a critical study of fictional and non-fictional representations of the post-Vietnam war era and is currently co-editing a collection of essays dealing with national cinemas.
KEITH BEATTIE teaches courses of film and media within the contemporary humanities program of the University of Queensland. He is the author of The Scar that Binds (New York University Press, 1998), a critical study of fictional and non-fictional representations of the post-Vietnam war era and is currently co-editing a collection of essays dealing with national cinemas. JFD Media studies