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E-grāmata: Drawn from Life: Issues and Themes in Animated Documentary Cinema

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Drawn from Life, a multidisciplinary anthology, introduces readers to a diverse range of filmmakers past and present who use the animated image as a documentary tool. In doing so, it explores a range of questions that preoccupy twenty-first-century film artists and audiences alike.

Documentary cinema has always drawn from real life, but an increasing number of contemporary filmmakers are going further still, drawing onscreen images of reality through a range of animated filmmaking techniques. Drawn from Life is the first book to explore the field of animated documentaries from a diverse range of scholarly and practice-based perspectives, exploring and proposing answers to a range of questions that preoccupy twenty-first-century film artists and audiences alike: Why use animation to document? How do such images reflect and influence our understanding and experience of reality, whether public or private, psychological or political? From early cinema to present-day scientific research, military uses, digital art and gaming, this book casts new light on the capacity of the moving image to act as a record of the world around us, challenging the orthodox definitions of documentary cinema.

Papildus informācija

The first book to explore the field of animated documentaries from a diverse range of scholarly and practice-based perspectives. Defines the central characteristics of the animated documentary film. Challenges and extends orthodox definitions of documentary cinema as well as animation. Surveys a diverse range of film works, genres, production techniques, historical eras, and cultural contexts.
List of Figures
vii
The Contributors viii
Editors' Introduction 1(14)
Nea Ehrlich
Jonathan Murray
Part 1 Past and Present
1 From Contextualisation to Categorisation of Animated Documentaries
15(16)
Pascal Lefevre
2 Before Sound, there was Soul: The Role of Animation in Silent Nonfiction Cinema
31(16)
Mihaela Mihailova
3 Indeterminate and Intermediate or Animated Nonfiction: Why Now?
47(22)
Nea Ehrlich
Part 2 Defining Terms and Contexts
4 Animated Documentary, Recollection, `Re-enactment' and Temporality
69(15)
Paul Ward
5 The Documentary Attraction: Animation, Simulation and the Rhetoric of Expertise
84(22)
Leon Gurevitch
6 Never Mind the Bollackers: Here's the Repositories, Sites and Archives in Nonfiction Animation
106(23)
Paul Wells
Part 3 Films and Filmmakers
7 Drawings to Remember
129(14)
Nanette Kraaikamp
8 Adorno, Lewis Klahr and the Shuddering Image
143(15)
Andrew Warstat
9 The Reasons for Animating Reality: Animated Documentary and Re-enactment in the Work of Jonas Odell
158(14)
Lawrence Thomas Martinelli
10 Memory Drawn into the Present: Waltz with Bashir and Animated Documentary
172(19)
Jonathan Murray
Part 4 Practice-based Perspectives
11 Making The Trouble with Love and Sex
191(15)
Jonathan Hodgson
12 `Does this look right?' Working Inside the Collaborative Frame
206(15)
Samantha Moore
13 Creative Challenges in the Production of Documentary Animation
221(14)
Sheila M. Sofian
Index 235
Jonathan Murray is Lecturer in Film and Visual Culture at Edinburgh College of Art. Nea Ehrlich recently completed her PhD in Art History at the University of Edinburgh.