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VSA2710/3710

Alternatives in documentary film - an Australian focus

Proposed to be offered next in 1998

Deane Williams

8 points
* 4 hours per week
* Second semester
* Clayton
* Prerequisite: At least one of VSA1040, VSA1050, VSA2190 or VA103.06

Objectives By the completion of this subject students are expected to demonstrate an understanding of the styles, strategies and structures of documentary film; a knowledge of the major `schools' in the international history of documentary film; an understanding of the various modes of documentary film; an ability to engage with written and filmic texts in a clear and confident manner.

Synopsis The subject will investigate a range of key issues in documentary and `non-fiction' film production, from the inception of the cinema to the present day, with a major focus on Australian documentary. Australian films examined include feminist films, television documentaries, deconstructive `essay' films, documentary-fiction mix experiments, ethnographic films and films made collectively by minority groups. The theoretical and practical issues discussed in relation to the Australian films will provide a framework for the examination of a number of important phases in the historical development of documentary. These will be studied in the context of political, technological and institutional change in the twentieth century. The subject is constructed to examine, wherever possible, the works of Australian documentary filmmakers in relation to the shifts in documentary theory and practice in the international arena. Topics for consideration include the influence of the British documentary movement of the 1930s on Australian documentary film culture, the efforts made by leftwing Australian filmmakers in the immediate postwar years, and the flowering of independent and radical documentary film practices in the late 1970s and 1980s. The subject will also consider the various ways Aboriginal filmmakers have chosen to represent their own communities, the debates around postcolonialism and postmodernism in relation to documentary film, and the ways the technological innovation has influenced the field of documentary.

Assessment second year First essay (2000 words): 35%
* Second essay (3000 words): 45%
* Visual test (1 hour): 20%

Assessment third year First essay (2000 words): 35%
* Second essay (3000 words): 45%
* Visual test (1 hour): 20%
* Third-year students will be expected to read more widely and work at a higher level than second-year students.

Preliminary reading

Barnouw E Documentary: A history of the non-fiction film (Revised edition) OUP, 1983

Prescribed texts

Aitken I Film and reform: John Grierson and the documentary film movement Routledge, 1990

Mamber S Cinema verite in America: Studies in uncontrolled documentary MIT P, 1974

Nichols B Representing reality: Issues and concepts in documentary Indiana U P, 1991

Nichols B Blurred boundaries: Questions of meaning in contemporary culture Indiana U P, 1994

Renov M (ed.) Theorizing documentary Routledge, 1993

Trinh M Woman/native/other Indiana U P, 1989


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Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996