Results for 'radio documentary'

980 found
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  1.  17
    Walory poznawcze reportaży radiowych w świetle dotychczasowych badań naukowych.Paulina Czarnek - 2011 - Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica 1 (1):134 - 140.
    Despite the fact that radio documentaries broadcast mainly strong emotions, news values of this genre are also its essential feature. Therefore, it is necessary to describe the potential of such works to deliver knowledge about the transcendent world, which could be significant for the listeners. The aim of this article is to show theses made by scholars as regards radio documentaries. Researchers’ analyses are related to the genre’s potential possibilities of to broaden people’s minds and influence the recipient’s (...)
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  2.  17
    Posibilidades y límites de la extensión cultural universitaria, 1935-1954: revistas y emisoras universitarias en Colombia. [REVIEW]Catalina Castrillón Gallego & Andrés Villegas - 2022 - Escritos 30 (64):89-102.
    This article investigates the use of communication media for the development of cultural extension activities carried out by the Universidad de Antioquia and the Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana between 1935 and 1953. On the basis of critical reviews on diverse documentary sources, it is described and analyzed how both institutions, following national and international benchmarks, developed strategies such as the publication of journals and the creation of radio broadcast stations over the years, which became relevant tools to extend and (...)
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  3.  36
    Cinematic Thoughts: Essays on Film and the Philosophy of Film.Gary James Jason - 2021 - Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang Publishers.
    Cinematic Thoughts: Essays on Film and the Philosophy of Film is an anthology of essays Gary Jason published (mainly) between 2012 and 2018. The book has seven parts. Part One consists of essays on propaganda films. The topics include how the Nazi Regime used film as a tool of propaganda, and its use of radio for propaganda. Part Two contains articles on genocide and film. These include two broad surveys of Holocaust documentaries, ranging from those that were done at (...)
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  4.  21
    Encounters with Bertrand Russell.Bryan Magee & Henry Hardy - 2022 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 42 (1):63-68.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Encounters with Bertrand RussellBryan Magee and Introduced by Henry HardyBryan Magee (1930–2019), the celebrated philosopher, politician, journalist, author and broadcaster, was (and still is) well known for his brilliant television conversations with prominent philosophers—a triumph of uncondescending popularisation. He was a consummate interviewer and discussion chairman, and one of the most articulate and engaging expositors, especially of ideas, who ever lived.Born a cockney in Hoxton, east London, he was (...)
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  5. Review essay,"Another Small Piece of a War: a Review of 'Charlie and his Orchestra'".Gary James Jason - 2017 - Liberty (December 4, 2017).
    In this essay, I explore a documentary about the curious case of Charlie and his Orchestra. While swing music was outlawed in Nazi Germany as “degenerate,” the Nazi regime created a radio program called “Charlie and his Orchestra” for foreign consumption. The propaganda lay in the changes to the original lyrics of the songs played, making them convey the anti-Semitic and other themes of the Nazi ideology. The review discusses just how good the musicians were, and how popular (...)
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  6.  77
    Writing Oz pop: An insider’s account of Australian popular culture making and historiography.Trevor Hogan & Peter Beilharz - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 109 (1):89-114.
    This interview – conducted by Peter Beilharz and Trevor Hogan with Clinton Walker over the course of three months (July to September 2011) between Melbourne and Sydney via email and Skype – explores the questions of Australian popular culture writing with, against, and of the culture industries themselves. Walker is a leading freelance Australian cultural historian and rock music journalist. He is the author of seven books, five about Australian music. He has been a radio DJ and TV presenter. (...)
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  7.  40
    (1 other version)Serge Daney: film, theory and philosophy.Garin Dowd - 2005 - In .
    Serge Daney is widely recognised in his homeland as the most important French film critic after André Bazin. In a career devoted to criticism for Cahiers du cinéma and later Libération, including a key period as editor during the transition from the journal’s PCF and then Maoist phase beginning in 1973, Daney also held a lecturing position for a spell at the University of Paris, Paris III, La Censure. He was a significant public intellectual and featured in several documentaries, including (...)
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  8. G. Di BLASIO and F. VALDONI.in Frequency Modulated Radio Links - 1968 - In Peter Koestenbaum (ed.), Proceedings. [San Jose? Calif.,: [San Jose? Calif.. pp. 129.
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  9. Hybrid documentary and non-binary cinema.Luke W. Moody - 2025 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Hybrid Documentary and Non-Binary Cinema offers an expansive exploration of the contemporary documentary cinema form, aesthetics, and ethics. Beginning with a brief history of early seminal examples of magical realism, and constructed realities in documentary and ethnographic film the book will focus on recent and present-day examples of work that blur the lines between fiction and non-fiction. The book will also take a series of case studies to question the vision and motives of filmmakers working between (...) and fictional film. It will consider the aesthetic and ethical challenges of these works and look toward the future of non-fiction filmmaking after the internet, and in the realm of the metaverse. The book will offer both an entry point to discover new tendencies and a deeper understanding for those readers who are more familiar with the field. Given its interdisciplinary subject nature, the book will appeal to audiences across a spectrum of interests such as film, fine art, anthropology, documentary, sociology and Drama. (shrink)
     
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  10.  5
    Documentary as exorcism: resisting the bewitchment of colonial Christianity.Robert Beckford - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Documentary as Exorcism is an interdisciplinary study that builds upon the insights of postcolonial studies, critical race theory, theological and religious studies and media and film studies to showcase the role of documentary film as a system of signifying capable of registering complex theological ideas while pursuing the authentic aims of documentary filmmaking. Robert Beckford marries the concepts of ‘theology as visual practice' and ‘theology as political engagement' to develop a new mode of documentary filmmaking that (...)
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  11.  20
    Documentary across platforms: reverse engineering media, place, and politics.Patricia Rodden Zimmermann - 2019 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, Office of Scholarly Publishing, Herman B Wells Library.
    In Documentary Across Platforms, noted scholar of film and experimental media Patricia R. Zimmermann offers a glimpse into the ever-evolving constellation of practices known as "documentary" and the way in which they investigate, engage with, and interrogate the world. Collected here for the first time are her celebrated essays and speculations about documentary, experimental, and new media published outside of traditional scholarly venues. These essays envision documentary as a complex ecology composed of different technologies, sets of (...)
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  12.  25
    Documentary.Julian Stallabrass (ed.) - 2013 - MIT Press.
    Documentary has undergone a marked revival in recent art, following a long period in which it was a denigrated and unfashionable practice. This has in part been led by the exhibition of photographic and video work on political issues at Documenta and numerous biennials and, since the turn of the century, issues of injustice, violence and trauma in increasing zones of conflict. Aesthetically, documentary is now one of the most prominent modes of art-making, in part assisted by the (...)
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  13.  26
    Theatrical documentary of performance art.Dagmar Podmaková - 2013 - Human Affairs 23 (1):81-90.
    M.H.L. is a theatrical production dedicated to the first Slovak professional female director Magda Husáková-Lokvencová, which combines documentary theatre and performance. Sláva Daubnerová wrote the script and scene concept and is director and plays the sole character in the play. She portrays the private and professional life of M.H.L. in a chronologically sequenced and mosaic-like fashion. M.H.L. is portrayed as an educated, broad-minded and intelligent woman who knows her own mind. She graduated in law and then took up theatre (...)
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  14.  40
    Documentary Time: Film and Phenomenology.Malin Wahlberg - 2008 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Finding the theoretical space where cinema and philosophy meet, Malin Wahlberg’s sophisticated approach to the experience of documentary film aligns with attempts to reconsider the premises of existential phenomenology. The configuration of time is crucial in organizing the sensory affects of film in general but, as Wahlberg adroitly demonstrates, in nonfiction films the problem of managing time is writ large by the moving image’s interaction with social memory and historical figures. Wahlberg discusses a thought-provoking corpus of classical and recent (...)
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  15.  23
    African Documentaries, Films, Texts, and Environmental Issues.Emmanuel Yewah - 2016 - Environment, Space, Place 8 (1):129-146.
    This study draws from theoretical environmental debates as well as a selection of films, documentaries, and texts to discuss Africans’ approaches to environmental and ecological problems. Furthermore, it highlights the various strategies that Africans have developed in their attempts to provide holistic and much more comprehensive responses to environmental challenges. Informed by African indigenous knowledge, those strategies do involve community-based micro-level initiatives, grassroots organizations, ancestral spirits, and use local languages or lingua franca to educate as well as prod the people’s (...)
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  16.  26
    The Documentary Surreal: Film and Painting in Luciano Emmer’s La Leggenda di Sant’Orsola (1948) and Henri Storck’s Le Monde de Paul Delvaux.Steven Jacobs - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (2):207-215.
    This article deals with the aesthetics of the art documentary of the 1940s and 1950s, which can be considered as the Golden Age of the genre. Prior to the breakthrough of television in Europe, which would usurp and standardize the art documentary, cinematic reproductions of artworks resulted in experimental shorts that were highly self-reflexive. These films became visual laboratories to investigate the tensions between movement and stasis, the two- and three-dimensional, and the real and the artificial—a film on (...)
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  17.  19
    The Documentary Real and the Shoah.Marc Kesel - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (2):245-254.
    Without the support of imagination, one would not have the slightest idea of the cruel ‘real’ that has occurred in the Nazi extermination camps. Yet, in documentaries imaging the events of the Shoah, one runs the risk of missing their most basic property, namely their unimaginability. The mere idea that one is able to imagine the unimaginable comes down to a denial of the Shoah’s status as an event that defies our understanding. The unimaginable ‘real’ of the Shoah, however, is (...)
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  18.  18
    From Documentary Meaning to Documentary Method: A Preliminary Comment on the Third Chapter of Harold Garfinkel’s Studies in Ethnomethodology: For Jörg Bergmann.Erhard Schüttpelz - 2019 - Human Studies 42 (2):221-237.
    The text deals with Harold Garfinkels theorizing of what Karl Mannheim called ‘documentary meaning’, and established as a foundation of all historical disciplines, and what Garfinkel calls the ‘documentary method’ of lay and professional sociological reasoning. The commentary tries to establish the systematical position of the chapter in Garfinkel’s ‘Studies in Ethnomethodology’, and, indeed, in Garfinkel’s social theory at the time of publication. This position involves, and redefines, Weber’s definition of sociology, Schütz’s sociology of knowledge and especially, the (...)
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  19.  23
    Documentary and ecosemiotics.Hing Tsang - 2016 - Sign Systems Studies 44 (1-2):186-208.
    This article argues that the work of the late Johan van der Keuken offers a contribution to ecological semiotics, and that it also defines the relationship between the semiotic animal and nature in ways that avoid glottocentricism. Taking from the recent work of Kalevi Kull, Jesper Hoffmeyer, and John Deely amongst others, I will argue that van der Keuken’s documentaries offer a view of ecology that is broader than a study of bio-physical processes that might reduce ecology to a narrow (...)
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  20.  20
    About documentary: anthropology on film: a philosophy of people and art.Robert Edmonds - 1974 - Dayton, Ohio: Pflaum.
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  21.  9
    Kill the documentary: a letter to filmmakers, students, and scholars.Jill Godmilow - 2021 - New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by Bill Nichols.
    Can the documentary be useful? Can a film change how its viewers think about the world and their potential role in it? In Kill the Documentary, the award-winning director Jill Godmilow issues an urgent call for a new kind of nonfiction filmmaking. She critiques documentary films from Nanook of the North to the recent Ken Burns/Lynn Novick series The Vietnam War. Tethered to what Godmilow calls the "pedigree of the real" and the "pornography of the real," they (...)
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  22.  7
    New Chinese-language documentaries: ethics, subject and place.Kuei-fen Chiu - 2015 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Yingjin Zhang.
    Documentary film-making is one of the most vibrant areas of media activity in China, with many independent film-makers producing documentaries on a range of sensitive socio-political matters, often bringing a strongly ethical approach. This book outlines the development of documentary film-making in mainland China and Taiwan, contrasts independent documentaries with official state productions, considers the production and distribution of independent documentary film-makers, and discusses the range and content of the documentaries. The book demonstrates the success of Chinese (...)
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  23.  29
    Documentary Fictions: Jacques Rancière and the Problem of Indexical Media.Konstantinos Koutras - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (2):262-281.
    The indexicality of film and sound recordings remains an unresolved problem in contemporary documentary theory. The prevailing conceptualisation of the documentary assigns it the status of a sober discourse, a framing in which history is modelled as absent cause and the unqualified distinction between fiction and non-fiction is considered sacrosanct. The denotative literalism characteristic of indexical media, however, confounds this conceptualisation, which in turn encourages the devaluing of documentary aesthetics; the documentary is not a medium of (...)
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  24.  40
    Deepfakes, Documentary and the Dead: “I Wasn’t Putting Words into His Mouth. I Was Just Trying to Make Them Come Alive.”.Kate Nash - 2022 - Journal of Media Ethics 37 (4):291-292.
    The moral questions raised by synthetic media are considered in the context of posthumous documentary biography. Two possibilities are explored: firstly, that synthesis of the voice in biographical documentary deceives in a distinctive way and secondly, that it is possible for synthetic media to harm the subject of posthumous documentary.
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  25. Falsehoods in Film: Documentary vs Fiction.Stacie Friend - 2021 - Studies in Documentary Film 15 (2):151-162.
    I claim that we should reject a sharp distinction between fiction and non-fiction according to which documentary is a faithful representation of the facts, whilst fiction films merely invite us to imagine what is made up. Instead, we should think of fiction and non-fiction as genres: categories whose membership is determined by a combination of non-essential features and which influence appreciation in a variety of ways. An objection to this approach is that it renders the distinction too conventional and (...)
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  26.  15
    Documentary Expression and Thirties America.William Stott - 1986 - University of Chicago Press.
    Views the merits of the documentary and examines its use in America during the thirties and early forties.
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  27.  44
    Diagnosis by Documentary: Professional Responsibilities in Informal Encounters.Alistair Wardrope & Markus Reuber - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (11):40-50.
    Most work addressing clinical workers' professional responsibilities concerns the norms of conduct within established professional–patient relationships, but such responsibilities may extend beyond the clinical context. We explore health workers' professional responsibilities in such “informal” encounters through the example of a doctor witnessing the misdiagnosis and mistreatment of a serious long-term condition in a television documentary, arguing that neither internalist approaches to professional responsibility nor externalist ones provide sufficiently clear guidance in such situations. We propose that a mix of both (...)
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  28.  29
    Documentary Fragments, Pop-Politics, and Fascism.Ronald E. Day - 2017 - Logeion Filosofia da Informação 3 (2):10-17.
    This article addresses the role of social media fragments in the return of fascist politics It argues that beside or contrary to a conscious collective intelligence emerging through the internet, a collective unconscious has seized the political space, delegitimatizing modern institutions of documentary truth based on evidence, method, and the institutional construction of facts.
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  29.  13
    Third digital documentary: a theory and practice of transmedia arts activism, critical design and ethics.Anita Chang - 2020 - New York: Peter Lang.
    In Third Digital Documentary: A Theory and Practice of Transmedia Arts Activism, Critical Design and Ethics Anita Chang offers a theory and methodology of transmedia arts activism within the technocultural and sociopolitical landscape of expanded documentary production, distribution, reception and participation. Through a detailed analysis of her transmedia project on indigenous and minority language endangerment and revival that consists of the feature-length documentary Tongues of Heaven, and the companion web application Root Tongue: Sharing Stories of Language Identity (...)
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  30.  88
    The Claims of Documentary: Expanding the educational significance of documentary film.Jeff Frank - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (10):1018-1027.
    The documentary film is a popular curriculum tool, and the goal of this paper is to expand the educational significance of the documentary genre I argue that current understandings of this genre are limited and limiting, and offer an alternative perspective on the genre. This alternative will be built from Stanley Cavell’s philosophy of education, in particular, his understanding of the role that ‘representativeness’ plays in teaching and learning.
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  31.  7
    Political camerawork: documentary and the lasting impact of reenacting historical trauma.D. Andy Rice - 2023 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    What mental and physical distress do actors, camerapersons, and reporters experience when working on reenactments of traumatic moments in history? In Political Camerawork, D. Andy Rice theorizes that the intense feelings produced while creating these performed scenarios, called "simulation documentaries," connect difficult pasts to the present. Building on his background as a nonfiction film director, producer, editor, and cinematographer, Rice analyzes performance techniques to gain insight into the emotional toll of simulation documentaries, including those reliving the Vietnam War, the US (...)
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  32. Documentaries, Docudramas, and Perceptual Beliefs.Enrico Terrone - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):43-56.
    The main accounts of the documentary in contemporary analytic aesthetics have difficulties in dealing with the distinction between documentaries and docudramas. On the one hand, the assertion-based accounts proposed by Noël Carroll, Trevor Ponech, and Carl Plantinga cannot properly differentiate documentaries from docudramas. On the other hand, Gregory Currie's account can do so by relying on the notion of trace, but this involves an undesirable side effect, namely, the exclusion, from the documentary, of those documentaries that do not (...)
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  33. Documentary-for-the-Other: Relationships, Ethics and (Observational) Documentary.Kate Nash - 2011 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 26 (3):224 - 239.
    While documentary ethics has been largely normative to date, there is growing interest in alternative forms of ethical thinking. The work of Emmanuel Levinas in particular is providing a way of thinking through both the ethics of documentary viewing and production. This article begins by drawing attention to the link between documentary ethics and aesthetics and then uses Levinas's work to consider the ethical relations established in observational documentary production. Of the different documentary modes, the (...)
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  34.  26
    Documentary Bioethics: Visual Narratives for Generations X and Y. [REVIEW]John C. Stys - 2006 - Journal of Medical Humanities 27 (1):57-66.
    Narrative bioethics is primarily understood to involve storytelling through the use of literature. This article suggests that other forms of media are necessary to convey stories of an ethical nature to an audience broader than one being trained as medical professionals. “Documentary bioethics” is a manner to present and interpret stories of an ethical nature using forms of popular electronic media in a reality-based documentary style to society at large, specifically Generations X and Y.
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  35.  66
    A Documentary History of the Problem of Fall from Kepler to Newton. Alexandre Koyré.Thomas Kuhn - 1957 - Isis 48 (1):91-93.
  36.  13
    Documentary.Gregory Currie - 2004 - In Arts and minds. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Defends the idea that documentary is a distinctive and important cinematic category, though an essentially vague one. This notion depends on that of a trace. A documentary must involve traces of its subject, and not merely testimony of it. Defines an ideal documentary as one where there is a certain kind of coherence between the narrative and the trace‐content of the work. Argues that the notion of an ideal documentary explains much in our attitude towards, and (...)
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  37. The pleasures of documentary tragedy.Stacie Friend - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (2):184-198.
    Two assumptions are common in discussions of the paradox of tragedy: (1) that tragic pleasure requires that the work be fictional or, if non-fiction, then non-transparently represented; and (2) that tragic pleasure may be provoked by a wide variety of art forms. In opposition to (1) I argue that certain documentaries could produce tragic pleasure. This is not to say that any sad or painful documentary could do so. In considering which documentaries might be plausible candidates, I further argue, (...)
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  38.  38
    “Black skin and blood”: Documentary photography and santu mofokeng's critique of the visualization of apartheid south Africa.David Campbell - 2009 - History and Theory 48 (4):52-58.
    This paper responds to Patricia Hayes’s insightful readings of Santu Mofokeng’s photographic work in South Africa. The paper operates from the premise that photography is a technology of visualization that both draws on and establishes a visual economy through which events and issues are materialized in particular ways. This allows the paper to pose questions and develop understandings about Mofokeng’s work in terms of the way certain factors coalesced to enable a particular representation of black South Africans in the global (...)
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  39.  11
    Documentary Images and Shared Encounters.David Brubaker - 1996 - Film and Philosophy 3:77-86.
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  40.  21
    Eugène Atget and Documentary Photography of the City.Vladimir Rizov - 2021 - Theory, Culture and Society 38 (3):141-163.
    This paper focuses on the documentary photography of Eugène Atget in late 19th and early 20th-century Paris. I will begin by exploring Atget’s position as a pioneering documentary photographer in the field, followed by an engagement with the urban environment of Paris, in which Atget worked almost exclusively. Finally, I will analyse a single photograph in depth while discussing it in relation to the work of Charles Baudelaire and Jacques Rancière. This text is a contribution to a literature (...)
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  41.  18
    (1 other version)Psychoanalysis and Ethics in Documentary Film.Agnieszka Piotrowska - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    This distinctively interdisciplinary approach to the subject encompasses filmmaking, psychoanalysis, philosophy and popular culture and offers a unique insight into documentary film practice from a psychoanalytic perspective. At the heart of the enquiry is belief that ‘transference-love’ is present in the documentary encounter. With a focus on testimony-driven film and a foreword by Michael Renov, who calls this book 'a radical and compelling account', _Psychoanalysis and Ethics in Documentary Film _covers a range of topics including: Four fundamental (...)
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  42.  17
    Contrary to reason: Documentary film-making and alternative psychotherapies. Des O’Rawe - 2024 - History of the Human Sciences 37 (2):166-183.
    This article explores how post-war documentary film-makers negotiated complex social, formal, and autobiographical issues associated with representing mental illness and its treatments, and the extent to which their respective approaches helped to challenge conventional attitudes to alternative psychotherapies – especially within the context of advances in new documentary film-making technologies, alongside a wider culture of social activism. Focussing on A Look at Madness ( Regard sur la folie; Mario Ruspoli, 1962, France) and Now Do You Get It Why (...)
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  43.  21
    The Documentary Real and the Shoah.Marc De Kesel - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (2):245-254.
    Without the support of imagination, one would not have the slightest idea of the cruel ‘real’ that has occurred in the Nazi extermination camps. Yet, in documentaries imaging the events of the Shoah, one runs the risk of missing their most basic property, namely their unimaginability. The mere idea that one is able to imagine the unimaginable comes down to a denial of the Shoah’s status as an event that defies our understanding. The unimaginable ‘real’ of the Shoah, however, is (...)
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  44.  13
    Death in Documentaries: The Memento Mori Experience.Benjamin Bennett-Carpenter - 2017 - Brill | Rodopi.
    In _Death in Documentaries: The Memento Mori Experience_, Benjamin Bennett-Carpenter suggests that documentaries are an especially apt form of contemporary _memento mori_; that is, documentaries offer transformative experiences for a viewer to renew one’s consciousness of mortality.
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  45.  34
    Documentary evidence, literary forgery, or manipulation of historical documents? Diogenes laertius and an Athenian honorary decree for Zeno of Citium.Matthias Haake - 2004 - Classical Quarterly 54 (02):470-483.
  46.  21
    Documentary evidence as hegemonic reconstruction.Winnie le ChengCheng - 2014 - Semiotica 2014 (200):165-184.
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  47. Documentary listening habits : from voice to audibility.Pooja Rangan - 2022 - In Kyle Stevens (ed.), The Oxford handbook of film theory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
     
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  48. A Documentary History of the Jews in the United States, 1654-1875.Morris U. Schappes, Joshua Bloch & Dagobert Runes - 1951 - Science and Society 15 (4):356-359.
     
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  49.  71
    The Documentary Real: Thinking Documentary Aesthetics.Frederik Le Roy & Robrecht Vanderbeeken - 2018 - Foundations of Science 23 (2):197-205.
    In this article we consider the growing interest in recent years in the use of documentary strategies in the wold of contemporary art, film and performing arts and explore some of the central epistemological assumptions underpinning the persistent idea that the documentary should be equated with ‘non-fiction’. Following Stella Bruzzi we argue that if documentary theory maintains objectivity as the primary measure of value, it will inevitably and continuously arrive at the conclusion that the documentary genre (...)
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  50. Identifying Documentary; Against the Trace Account.Shannon Brick - 2020 - Film and Philosophy 24:63-83.
    This article argues that we ought to reject Gregory Currie’s “Trace Account” of documentary film. According to the Trace Account, a film is a documentary so long the majority of its constitutive images are traces of the film’s subject matter. The argument proceeds by considering how proponents of the Trace Account could respond to Noel Carroll’s charge that their analysis is radically revisionary. I argue that the only responses available are either implausible or show that a fully worked (...)
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