Recording Reality, Desiring the Real

Author:   Elizabeth Cowie
Publisher:   University of Minnesota Press
ISBN:  

9780816645480


Pages:   296
Publication Date:   02 March 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Recording Reality, Desiring the Real


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Overview

Documentary has once again emerged as one of the most vital cultural forms, whether seen in cinemas or inside the home, as digital, film, or video. In Recording Reality, Desiring the Real, Elizabeth Cowie looks at the history of documentary and its contemporary forms, showing how it has been simultaneously understood as factual, as story, as art, and as political, addressing the seeming paradox between the pleasures of spectacle in the documentary and its project of informing and educating.

Full Product Details

Author:   Elizabeth Cowie
Publisher:   University of Minnesota Press
Imprint:   University of Minnesota Press
Dimensions:   Width: 17.80cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9780816645480


ISBN 10:   0816645485
Pages:   296
Publication Date:   02 March 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: The Spectacle of Actuality and the Desire for Reality 1. Narrating the Real: The Fiction and the Nonfiction of Documentary Storytelling 2. Working Images: Representing Work and Voicing the Ordinary 3. Documentary Desire: Seeing for Ourselves and Identifying in Reality 4. Documenting the Real 5. Ways of Seeing and the Surreal of Reality 6. Specters of the Real: Documentary Time and Art Notes Index

Reviews

<p> Elizabeth Cowie brings her keen analytical intelligence to bear in addressing the paradoxes of documentary. She demonstrates how the theoretically informed analysis of the history of documentary has become even more crucial in the light of its recent modes of incarnation in reality television, news/catastrophe reporting, and the public display of personal, seemingly mundane, everyday details on the Internet. This is an intricate and powerful treatment of our psychical investment in the representation of the real that will certainly have a major impact on our thinking about documentary. --Mary Anne Doane, Brown University


It is perceptive and provocative. --Jump Cut Recording Reality, Desiring the Real is both timely and relevant. This book shine when periodically referencing insightful historical points of origins of the documentary. --documentary.org Recording Reality, Desiring the Real takes us beyond the contexts, issues, and 'messages' of documentary 'evidence' to reveal how documentaries construct their realities, work as experiences, function aesthetically and culturally, reflect and engage the world around us. --New Formations The new book offers a consistent psychoanalytical theorization of the genre, a move that one has to still consider as groundbreaking. Cowie, using the thought of Derrida and Zizek as well as Bakhtin and other theorists, offers an in-depth analysis of the relationship between time and space in a documentary film. --Intellect Journal Cowie's theoretical exploration of the many paradoxical components of documentaries and documentary spectatorship in Recording Reality, Desiring the Real stands out as a major contribution to film studies. --Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media Recording Reality, Desiring the Real makes an important contribution to the applications of psychoanalytic and other cultural theories on the foundational questions of documentary. --International Journal of Communication Elizabeth Cowie brings her keen analytical intelligence to bear in addressing the paradoxes of documentary. She demonstrates how the theoretically informed analysis of the history of documentary has become even more crucial in the light of its recent modes of incarnation in reality television, news/catastrophe reporting, and the public display of personal, seemingly mundane, everyday details on the Internet. This is an intricate and powerful treatment of our psychical investment in the representation of the real that will certainly have a major impact on our thinking about documentary. --Mary Anne Doane, Brown University It is perceptive and provocative. Jump Cut Recording Reality, Desiring the Real is both timely and relevant. This book shine when periodically referencing insightful historical points of origins of the documentary. documentary.org Recording Reality, Desiring the Real takes us beyond the contexts, issues, and messages of documentary evidence to reveal how documentaries construct their realities, work as experiences, function aesthetically and culturally, reflect and engage the world around us. New Formations The new book offers a consistent psychoanalytical theorization of the genre, a move that one has to still consider as groundbreaking. Cowie, using the thought of Derrida and Zizek as well as Bakhtin and other theorists, offers an in-depth analysis of the relationship between time and space in a documentary film. Intellect Journal Cowie s theoretical exploration of the many paradoxical components of documentaries and documentary spectatorship in Recording Reality, Desiring the Real stands out as a major contribution to film studies. Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media Recording Reality, Desiring the Real makes an important contribution to the applications of psychoanalytic and other cultural theories on the foundational questions of documentary. International Journal of Communication Elizabeth Cowie brings her keen analytical intelligence to bear in addressing the paradoxes of documentary. She demonstrates how the theoretically informed analysis of the history of documentary has become even more crucial in the light of its recent modes of incarnation in reality television, news/catastrophe reporting, and the public display of personal, seemingly mundane, everyday details on the Internet. This is an intricate and powerful treatment of our psychical investment in the representation of the real that will certainly have a major impact on our thinking about documentary. Mary Anne Doane, Brown University


Author Information

Elizabeth Cowie is professor of film studies at the University of Kent, Canterbury, UK.

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