1st Edition
The Documentary Filmmaker's Intuition Creating Ethical and Impactful Non-fiction Films
1. Documentary Production: Fear, Failure & Intuition 2. Finding Stories & Ideas 3. Research, Access & Point of View 4. Ethics: Representation Subjectivity and the Colonized Image 5. Challenging Forms: Ecstatic Truth & Elusive Fiction 6. Intimacies: Autobiography, Family Histories and Personal Story-telling 7. Script & Treatment Writing For Documentary 8. Developing Strategies for Impact 9. Shooting & Editing in Development 10. Preparing the Pitch: Structure and Components of a Good Pitch 11. Directing with the Moment: Aliveness, Adaptation and Awareness 12. Preparing for Production: Considerations As You Start Shooting 13. Ethics in Production: Dealing with Film Participants and Crews 14. Talking to Strangers: Establishing Relationships & Doing Interviews 15. Building Community Through Filming Community 16. Post-Production Editing, Organizing Material and Re-writing 17. Sparking Impact: Creating Strategies for Change 18. Marketing & Distribution in the Digital Age . Further Reading & Resources
Biography
Shannon Walsh is a filmmaker, an associate professor in Film Production at the University of British Columbia, and a research associate at the South African Research Chair in Social Change at the University of Johannesburg. She has written and directed six feature documentaries. Her films have been theatrically released; broadcast on networks such as ARTE, Al-Jazeera, CBC and Netflix; and screened at film festivals and museums globally. She has also published two edited books and many articles and chapters exploring issues such as inequality, social justice and visual methods. She was a Guggenheim Fellow in 2020 and was awarded the Canadian Governor General’s Award in Visual and Media Art in 2023.
'Shannon Walsh has written an incisive book, which acts as a brilliant primer on how to make and distribute a documentary while dealing with the all-important issue of being an ethical filmmaker. This is a great read and an important volume.'
-Marc Glassman, editor POV Magazine
'The explosion of documentary filmmaking has compelled makers to ask serious questions about ethical practices, representation, our relationship to our subjects and the like. Shannon Walsh’s essential and thoughtful book is a much-needed look at the profound issues we are all facing as the documentary genre continues to evolve.'
-Ina Fichman, Creative Producer (Fire of Love, Adrianne & The Castle, The Wanted 18)






