The subjective voice and hybrid documentary filmmaking strategies: A case study

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Date
2019
Authors
Daniels, Jill
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Film and Screen Media, University College Cork
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Abstract
In this case study Jill Daniels references several of her recent experimental documentary films that mediate memory, place and subjectivities: Not Reconciled (2009); The Border Crossing (2011); My Private Life (2013); My Private Life II (2015) and Journey to the South (2017). She proposes the notion that film communicates in a sensory mode that may defy written theorisation or interpretation, with a rigor and precision that is quite separate to that of written language, but that nevertheless films, like written language, may add to knowledge. She argues that film theory is essential to enable the filmmaker to raise their work above the narrow framework of craft. She interrogates the notion that experimentation in documentary films may avoid perceived constraints of certainty, evidence and veracity. She notes that as a practice researcher within the academy she has freedom to experiment, which has brought considerable benefits to her practice.
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Practice as research , Memory , Place , Autobiography , Experimental , Documentary filmmaking
Citation
Daniels, J. (2019) 'The subjective voice and hybrid documentary filmmaking strategies: A case study', Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media, 17, pp. 97-110. https://doi.org/10.33178/alpha.17.06