288 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    Praise for New Documentary:

    'It's refreshing to find a book that cuts through the tired old debates that have surrounded documentary film and television. It heralds a welcome new approach.'

    Sight and Sound

    'Documentary practice changes so fast that books on the subject are often out of date before they are published. Bruzzi's achievement is to have understood the genre as an activity based on performance rather than observation. This is a fresh perspective which illuminates the fundamental shifts that will continue to take place in the genre as it enters its second century.'

    John Ellis, Professor of Media Arts, Royal Holloway, University of London

    New Documentary provides a contemporary look at documentary and fresh and challenging ways of theorising the non-fiction film. As engaging as the original, this second edition features thorough updates to the existing chapters, as well as a brand new chapter on contemporary cinema release documentaries.

    This new edition includes:

    • Contemporary films such as Capturing the Friedmans, Être et avoir, Farenheit 9/11, The Fog of War and Touching the Void as well as more canonical texts such as Hoop Dreams and Shoah
    • Additional interviews with influential practitioners, such as director Michael Apted and producer Stephen Lambert

    • A comprehensively revised discussion of modern observational documentary, including docusoaps, reality television and formatted documentaries
    • The work of documentary filmmakers such as Nicholas Barker, Errol Morris, Nick Broomfield, Molly Dineen and Michael Moore and the work of Avant-Garde filmmakers such as Chris Marker and Patrick Keiller
    • Gender identity, queer theory, performance, race and spectatorship.

    Bruzzi shows how theories of documentary filmmaking can be applied to contemporary texts and genres, and discusses the relationship between recent, innovative examples of the genre and the more established canon of documentary.

    Part 1: Ground rules  1. The event: archive and newsreel  2. Narration: the film and its voice  Part 2: The legacy of direct cinema  3. Documentary journeys  4. New observational documentary: from 'docusoaps' to reality television  Part 3: Performance  5. The president and the image  6. The performative documentary  Part 4: New directions  7. Contemporary documentaries: performance and success

    Biography

    Stella Bruzzi is Chair in Film and Television Studies at Warwick University. Her previous publications include the co-edited collection Fashion Cultures: Theories, Explorations and Analysis (2000, with Pamela Church Gibson) and Undressing Cinema: Clothing and Identity in the Movies (1997). Her most recent publication is Bringing Up Daddy: Fatherhood and Masculinity in Post-War Hollywood (2005).

    'It's refreshing to find a book that cuts through the tired old debates that have surrounded documentary film and television heralds a welcome new approach.' - Sight and Sound

    'This book is going to be essential reading for any media teacher with a serious interest in documentary and is highly recommended for centres selecting 'Documentary' as one of the two 'Textual Topics' on AQA's Media spec.' In The Picture