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Contemporary Documentary offers a rich survey of the rapidly
expanding landscape of documentary film, television, video, and new
media. The collection of original essays addresses the emerging
forms, popular genres, and innovative approaches of the digital
era. The anthology highlights geographically and thematically
diverse examples of documentaries that have expanded the scope and
impact of non-fiction cinema and captured the attention of global
audiences over the past three decades. It also explores the
experience of documentary today, with its changing dynamics of
production, collaboration, distribution, and exhibition, and its
renewed political and cultural relevance. The twelve chapters -
featuring engaging case studies and written from a wide range of
perspectives including film theory, social theory, ethics, new
media, and experience design - invite students to think critically
about documentary as a vibrant field, unrestricted in its
imagination and quick in its response to new forms of filmmaking.
Offering a methodical exploration of the expansive reach of
documentary as a creative force in the media and society of the
twenty-first century, Contemporary Documentary is an ideal
collection for students of film, media, and communication who are
studying documentary film.
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Jack Girlz
Danielle Marcus
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R349
Discovery Miles 3 490
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Contemporary Documentary offers a rich survey of the rapidly
expanding landscape of documentary film, television, video, and new
media. The collection of original essays addresses the emerging
forms, popular genres, and innovative approaches of the digital
era. The anthology highlights geographically and thematically
diverse examples of documentaries that have expanded the scope and
impact of non-fiction cinema and captured the attention of global
audiences over the past three decades. It also explores the
experience of documentary today, with its changing dynamics of
production, collaboration, distribution, and exhibition, and its
renewed political and cultural relevance. The twelve chapters -
featuring engaging case studies and written from a wide range of
perspectives including film theory, social theory, ethics, new
media, and experience design - invite students to think critically
about documentary as a vibrant field, unrestricted in its
imagination and quick in its response to new forms of filmmaking.
Offering a methodical exploration of the expansive reach of
documentary as a creative force in the media and society of the
twenty-first century, Contemporary Documentary is an ideal
collection for students of film, media, and communication who are
studying documentary film.
"Marcus makes a compelling and well-documented case that the
post-1970s culture wars have been fought in large part in terms of
competing understandings of the Fifties and Sixties. This is a
smart, illuminating study of the political uses of nostalgia."
--Paul S. Boyer, editor-in-chief, The Oxford Companion to United
States History "This is a terrific and important book. The author
weaves together popular cultural influences and politics in a
masterly way. In doing so he has advanced the narrow view of
cultural studies into the public realm with a bang." --Lary May,
author of The Big Tomorrow: Hollywood and the Politics of the
American Way In the twenty-first century, why do we keep talking
about the Fifties and Sixties? The stark contrast between these
decades, their concurrence with the childhood and youth of the baby
boomers, and the emergence of televison and rock and roll help to
explain their symbolic power. In Happy Days and Wonder Years,
Daniel Marcus reveals how interpretations of these decades have
figured in the cultural politics of the United States since 1970.
From Ronald Reagan's image as a Fifties Cold Warrior to Bill
Clinton's fandom for Elvis Presley and John F. Kennedy, politicians
have invoked the Fifties and Sixties to connect to their public.
Marcus shows how films, television, music, and memoirs have
responded to the political nostalgia of today, and why our
entertainment remains immersed in reruns, revivals, and references
to earlier times. This book offers a new understanding of how
politics and culture have influenced our notions of the past, and
how events from long ago continue to shape our understandings of
the present day. Daniel Marcus is an assistant professor in the
department of communication at Wayne State University. As a member
of the Paper Tiger Television collective, he edited ROAR The Paper
Tiger Guide to Media Activism.
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