Группа авторов

A Companion to Motion Pictures and Public Value


Скачать книгу

indicates, the book is structured in terms of (a non-exhaustive list of) different sorts of value that, we claim, can be understood as yielding public value or values that are partly constitutive of a common good. Given the breadth and heterogeneity of the contributions collected here, organized in seven different sections, our discussion in this main introduction will remain quite general. Each section of the book is preceded by a section introduction, in which we outline the main themes of the section and draw some connections between the individual chapters therein. For now, then, we will aim to do just two things. First, we will sketch a bit of background context for the project, outline its aims, and describe the approaches that characterize the contributions to the volume. Then, we will explain how we are conceiving of the concepts of “motion pictures,” “value,” and “public value” respectively.

      Background Context, Aims, and Approach

       Background Context

      Having emerged in the 1960s, film studies, and, more recently, screen studies, cannot be said entirely to have ignored the ways in which motion pictures are variously imbued with value, contribute value to a given society, or serve particular values. Three examples suggest how concepts of value, whether explicitly or implicitly, underpin vital areas of inquiry in this field. Let us, then, briefly evoke the research paradigms associated with useful cinema, radical/activist cinema, and state-supported filmmaking in small nations.

      Field-defining edited volumes such as Vinzenz Hediger and Patrick Vonderau’s Films That Work: Industrial Film and the Productivity of Media (2009); Devin Orgeron, Marsha Orgeron, and Dan Streible’s Learning with the Lights Off: Educational Film (2012); and Charles Acland and Haidee Wasson’s Useful Cinema (2011) effectively rescued non-theatrical filmmaking, with its “functional” (Acland and Wasson, 2) approach to motion pictures, from the margins of the discipline. Coined to identify the multiplicities of cinema’s functionalities, the term “useful cinema” is now one of screen studies’ key words. Describing useful cinema as “an enduring and stable parallel industry to the more spectacular realm of what we commonly think of as commercial film,” Acland and Wasson (2011, 2) essentially locate its specificity in its instrumental value. Associated, not with any particular mode of production, genre, or, even context of exhibition, useful cinema emerges, claim Acland and Wasson, when “institutions and institutional agents” adopt a particular “disposition” (2011, 4) toward the motion pictures in question. This stance is one that sees motion pictures as an effective means of achieving clearly defined goals, as “a tool that is useful, a tool that makes, persuades, instructs, demonstrates and does something” (2011, 6). Well-known instances of useful cinema include industrial films designed to train workers (Groening 2011), health films produced for the purposes of educating a population about matters of illness and health (Ostherr 2011), and films made to further the goals of museum educators (Wasson 2011). In each of these cases, motion pictures are a deliberately selected means to a desired end. Although Acland and Wasson do not use the term “instrumental value,” their references to functionality and tools strongly suggest a view of useful cinema as a repository of instrumental value harnessed to goals of public benefit.