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TYPES OF DOCUMENTARY Media Studies
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Poetic “reassembling fragments of the world”, a transformation of historical material into a more abstract, lyrical form, usually associated with 1920s and modernist ideas Media Studies
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Expository 'direct address', social issues assembled as an argument and mediated by a voice-of-God narration. Often associated with 1920s-1930s, and some of the rhetoric and polemic surrounding WW2 Media Studies
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Observational By the 1960s cameras became smaller and able to document life in a less intrusively. There is less need to control lighting, etc. leaving the social actors free to act and the documentarists free to record without interacting with each other Media Studies
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Participatory The encounter between film-maker and subject is recorded, as the film-maker actively engages with the situation they are documenting, asking questions of their subjects and sharing experiences with them. Heavily reliant on the honesty of witnesses. Media Studies
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Reflexive Demonstrates consciousness of the process of reading documentary, and engages actively with the issues of realism and representation, acknowledging the presence of the viewer and the modality judgments they arrive at. Corresponds to critical theory of the 1980s Media Studies
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Performative Acknowledges the emotional and subjective aspects of documentary. Presenting ideas as part of a context, having different meanings for different people. Often autobiographical in nature. Media Studies
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These ideas first described in the book Introduction to Documentary by Bill Nichols (2001) Media Studies
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