'That women are at the forefront of new documentary practices and forms should come as no surprise. Documentary, whether those writing its history have recognised it properly or not, has always had its female innovators, dating all the way back to Esfir Shub and Ruby Grierson. The focus on authorship, in relation to significant shifts, both technological and cultural, is useful and important especially considering how implicitly gendered discussions of authorship have been historically. But perhaps the most exciting contribution of this book is its feminist updating of activist media, another…mehr
'That women are at the forefront of new documentary practices and forms should come as no surprise. Documentary, whether those writing its history have recognised it properly or not, has always had its female innovators, dating all the way back to Esfir Shub and Ruby Grierson. The focus on authorship, in relation to significant shifts, both technological and cultural, is useful and important especially considering how implicitly gendered discussions of authorship have been historically. But perhaps the most exciting contribution of this book is its feminist updating of activist media, another male dominated area of film/media studies, and one in which women's contribution has been nothing short of profound. This volume writes the history of the latest transformations in documentary with women filmmakers from all over the world, and not just the global north, at the centre. It serves as a corrective and a model for future attempts to narrate that history going forward.' Alisa Lebow, University of Sussex This book, like its twin volume Female Authorship and the Documentary Image, centres on pressing issues in relation to female authorship in contemporary documentary practices. Addressing the politics of representation and authorship both behind and in front of the camera, a range of international scholars now expand the theoretical and practical framework informing the current scholarship on documentary cinema, which has so far neglected questions of gender. Female Agency and Documentary Strategies focuses on how self-portraiture and contemporary documentary manifestations such as blogging and the prevalent usage of social media shape and inform female subjectivities and claims to truth. The book examines the scope of authorship and agency open to women using these technologies as a form of activism, centring on notions of relationality, selfhood and subjectivity. BOEL ULFSDOTTER is an independent scholar of Media Aesthetics and Visual Culture, currently affiliated with the Department of Cultural Sciences at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. ANNA BACKMAN ROGERS is a Senior Lecturer in Feminist Philosophy and Visual Culture at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. For more information please visit www.femaleauthorship.org Cover image: film still from Belleville Baby (Dir. Mia Engberg, Sweden, 2013). Courtesy Mia Engberg/Story Cover design: www.paulsmithdesign.com [EUP logo] edinburghuniversitypress.com ISBN [vol 2] 978-1-4744-1947-5 BarcodeHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Boel Ulfsdotter is an independent fine arts scholar specialised in screen studies, currently affiliated with the Department of Cultural Sciences at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Anna Backman Rogers is a Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Gothenberg, Sweden.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Kate Nash Introduction Boel Ulfsdotter and Anna Backman Rogers Section one: NEW MEDIA AND ACTIVISM Chapter 1: KRISTOPHER FALLON: "The Pencil of Identity: Instagram as Inadvertent (Female) Autobiography" Chapter 2: CADENCE KINSEY: "Archetype and Authenticity: Reflections on Amalia Ulman's Excellences and Perfections" Chapter 3: MONICA TITTON: "Blogging the Female Self: Authorship, Self-Performance and Identity Politics in Fashion Blogs" Section two: RELATIONALITY, SELFHOOD AND SUBJECTIVITIES Chapter 4: GAIL VANSTONE: "'Scriptrix Narrans' - Digital Documentary Storytelling's Radical Potential" Chapter 5: KIM MUNRO: "Hybrid Practices and Voice-Making in Contemporary Female Documentary Film" Chapter 6: KERREEN ELY-HARPER: "Record Keeping: Family Memories on Film - Rea Tajiri's History and Memory: For Akiko and Takashig and Wisdom Gone Wild" Chapter 7: ANNA BACKMAN ROGERS: "Not Because My Heart Is Gone; Simply The Other Side": Francesca Woodman's Relational and Ephemeral Subjectivity at the Limit of the Image" Chapter 8: CARLA MAIA: "Other Women: Thinking Class and Gender in Contemporary Interview: "Visualising Our Voices": Hong Kong Scholar and Film Director Vivian Wenli Lin, in Conversation With Boel Ulfsdotter" Section three: IDENTITY POLITICS OF DOCUMENTARY Chapter 9: ANNA MISIAK: "From Visceral Style to Discourse of Resistance": Reading Alka Sadat's Afghan Documentaries on Violence Against Women" Chapter 10: JOHN A. RILEY: "Documenting Georgia in Transition: The Films of Salome Jashi and Nino Kirtadze" Chapter 11: LIDIA MERAS: "Profession: Documentarist. Underground Documentary Making in Iran" Interview: "Reflecting Through Images": The Documentaries of Mercedes Alvarez by Linda Ehrlich
Preface Kate Nash Introduction Boel Ulfsdotter and Anna Backman Rogers Section one: NEW MEDIA AND ACTIVISM Chapter 1: KRISTOPHER FALLON: "The Pencil of Identity: Instagram as Inadvertent (Female) Autobiography" Chapter 2: CADENCE KINSEY: "Archetype and Authenticity: Reflections on Amalia Ulman's Excellences and Perfections" Chapter 3: MONICA TITTON: "Blogging the Female Self: Authorship, Self-Performance and Identity Politics in Fashion Blogs" Section two: RELATIONALITY, SELFHOOD AND SUBJECTIVITIES Chapter 4: GAIL VANSTONE: "'Scriptrix Narrans' - Digital Documentary Storytelling's Radical Potential" Chapter 5: KIM MUNRO: "Hybrid Practices and Voice-Making in Contemporary Female Documentary Film" Chapter 6: KERREEN ELY-HARPER: "Record Keeping: Family Memories on Film - Rea Tajiri's History and Memory: For Akiko and Takashig and Wisdom Gone Wild" Chapter 7: ANNA BACKMAN ROGERS: "Not Because My Heart Is Gone; Simply The Other Side": Francesca Woodman's Relational and Ephemeral Subjectivity at the Limit of the Image" Chapter 8: CARLA MAIA: "Other Women: Thinking Class and Gender in Contemporary Interview: "Visualising Our Voices": Hong Kong Scholar and Film Director Vivian Wenli Lin, in Conversation With Boel Ulfsdotter" Section three: IDENTITY POLITICS OF DOCUMENTARY Chapter 9: ANNA MISIAK: "From Visceral Style to Discourse of Resistance": Reading Alka Sadat's Afghan Documentaries on Violence Against Women" Chapter 10: JOHN A. RILEY: "Documenting Georgia in Transition: The Films of Salome Jashi and Nino Kirtadze" Chapter 11: LIDIA MERAS: "Profession: Documentarist. Underground Documentary Making in Iran" Interview: "Reflecting Through Images": The Documentaries of Mercedes Alvarez by Linda Ehrlich
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