DOCUMENTARY MEDIA & HISTORICAL TRANSFORMATIONS
INDIANA UNIVERSITY'S 2016-2017 SAWYER SEMINAR
About
This seminar is designed to bring filmmakers, historians, legal scholars, film and media scholars, anthropologists, cognitive scientists, and journalists together. It consists of five 2-day conferences, hosted by the Indiana University Cinema, and includes film screenings, lectures, panels, and roundtables. Each conference will address the relationship between documentary and major historical transformations—colonialism, human rights, neoliberalism—examining how documentaries both reveal and shape socio-political change.
Among others, we will explore the following questions: How do films made during historical transformations reveal a new understanding of the status of the nonfiction image? How do documentary filmmakers work with and for communities and do so not only during the initial release of the film but over the extended "life" of a film? How does accounting for the circulation of documentary films reveal the historical networks that shaped the reception of the films and the key players' (individual, institutional, governmental) interests in the films? How are the dynamics between political urgency and ethical treatment often revealingly reconfigured in moments of historical transition? How have changes in media technologies related to documentary informed its role in shaping social imaginaries?