How Documentaries Went Mainstream: A History, 1960-2022
Autor Nora Stoneen Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 iun 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197557303
ISBN-10: 0197557309
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 235 x 158 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197557309
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 235 x 158 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Stone's history of post-vérité U.S. documentary is, simply put, the book I've been waiting for. For too long, documentary histories have focused primarily on makers and movements, but Stone weaves an account of the film markets, documentary institutions, and shifts in film culture driving documentary's increased public visibility. Whether discussing canonical works, box office flops, public television broadcasts, or popular documentary hits, this book provides a narrative that reframes and illuminates the major changes in the documentary landscape over the last half century.
How Documentaries Went Mainstream explores the tension between public service and commodity exchange in the documentary film market by tracing the shifting industrial trends in documentary distribution and exhibition between the 1960s and today. Deftly researched and incisively written, Stone's book offers an important intervention in the history of documentary by focusing on the mode's industrial concerns. Essential reading for anyone interested in how and why documentary has come to occupy such a prolific and lucrative corner of the media market in recent years.
Stone's work is an essential reference for anyone interested in the development of American documentary film.
In this refreshing addition to the history of nonfiction film, Stone foregrounds distribution and circulation as the locus of documentary's influence, tracing evolutions in infrastructure, film culture, and market machinations to explain the genre's commercial transformation.
The value of documentaries as commodities and as public services coexists across the world. The core of Nora Stone's painstakingly researched book How Documentaries Went Mainstream: A History, 1960-2022 reflects this conflict, as it traces the development of documentaries from Hollywoods periphery to the mainstay of Internet streaming services. Stone's insightful contribution to the history of nonfiction cinema places distribution and circulation front and center, demonstrating how changes in infrastructure, film culture, and market dynamics have shaped the commercial development of the genre. The book is organized chronologically, with each chapter concentrating on a distinct period in the growth and spread of documentaries and the networks that support them.
How Documentaries Went Mainstream explores the tension between public service and commodity exchange in the documentary film market by tracing the shifting industrial trends in documentary distribution and exhibition between the 1960s and today. Deftly researched and incisively written, Stone's book offers an important intervention in the history of documentary by focusing on the mode's industrial concerns. Essential reading for anyone interested in how and why documentary has come to occupy such a prolific and lucrative corner of the media market in recent years.
Stone's work is an essential reference for anyone interested in the development of American documentary film.
In this refreshing addition to the history of nonfiction film, Stone foregrounds distribution and circulation as the locus of documentary's influence, tracing evolutions in infrastructure, film culture, and market machinations to explain the genre's commercial transformation.
The value of documentaries as commodities and as public services coexists across the world. The core of Nora Stone's painstakingly researched book How Documentaries Went Mainstream: A History, 1960-2022 reflects this conflict, as it traces the development of documentaries from Hollywoods periphery to the mainstay of Internet streaming services. Stone's insightful contribution to the history of nonfiction cinema places distribution and circulation front and center, demonstrating how changes in infrastructure, film culture, and market dynamics have shaped the commercial development of the genre. The book is organized chronologically, with each chapter concentrating on a distinct period in the growth and spread of documentaries and the networks that support them.
Notă biografică
Nora Stone is a film historian and filmmaker teaching at the University of North Alabama. She earned a PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and has published work in Media Industries Journal, Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, and Los Angeles Review of Books. Her short films have screened at the Maryland Film Festival, Wisconsin Film Festival, Architecture and Design Film Festival, among others. She produced and art-directed the independent feature film A Dim Valley (distributed by Altered Innocence).