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A Companion to Documentary Film History


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“Corporate Authorship: French Industrial Culture and the Culture of French Industry” draws on a deep well of archival research in developing a “symbiotic” approach to authorship through his consideration of documentaries made for corporations. Using the case study of the relationship between Société Cinétest (a producer of industrial films) and the oil company Société Nationale des Pétroles d'Aquitaine, Jacobson racks focus between a micro‐level attention to the artisans and would‐be auteurs at work and a macro‐level attention to the corporate images that are the expression of abstract corporate authors. He expands our understanding of the entwined histories of documentary capture and forms of extractive capitalism and petrocultures, considering the aesthetics and visual cultures of modern energy. Like Gadassik's study of the analog information processing powers of the montagesses, Zoë Druick's “Documentality: The Postwar Mental Health Film and the Database Logic of the Government Film Agency” interweaves close and distant readings of two series of mental health films – Mental Mechanisms, which enjoyed wide distribution, and Mental Symptoms, which was intended for use by medical professionals – to sketch a genealogy of what we now call the “database documentary” that develops through the instrumental use of documentary film as a tool of governmentality, or as she develops it with reference to Hito Steyerl, “documentality.” Conceptualizing the post–World War II efforts of the National Film Board of Canada as an “information apparatus of the welfare state,” Druick reads the state‐sponsored documentaries as entries into a bureaucratic archive and proto‐database of modern life. These case studies consider authorship at the level of the state, the film institution, and the clinic, and pose the “text” as not just the films, but the attempted management of an imagined national population as “written” and administered in the liberal state's image.

      Audiovisual writing and erasure in or against the state's image forms the subject of the final entry to this section on Authors, Authorship, and Authoring Agents. Joshua Neves's “Unmanned Capture: Automatic Cameras and Lifeless Subjects in Contemporary Documentary” analyzes the highly networked, posthuman modality of unmanned capture. Foregrounding the connective aspects of AuNT, he explores the forms of audiovisual recording in which the presumptive ethical agent of an in‐the‐flesh human camera operator – often theorized as bearing witness to what she records – has been redistributed between computer interfaces, artificial intelligence, and human actors working remotely, such as in the case of camera‐equipped drones and closed‐circuit surveillance video. To this, he also adds the countervailing emergence of forms of highly subjective and personal witnesses through cell‐phone video uploads that produce a form of event perspectivalism, whose unruly potential is increasingly tamed by algorithmic processing and interpretation. Neves mobilizes episodes from across the globe (including Tripoli, Foshon, and Ferguson) to consider how such emergent forms of networked and unmanned audiovisual encounter push at the limits of actuality, authorship, and what, following Michael Renov (2004), we might (still?) call the “subject of documentary.” Who is or isn't made recognizable by such distributed audio‐visual practices in the era of unmanned capture? How do these new forms of nonfiction image‐making and interpretation participate in the redistribution and reconsideration not just of authorship but of “the human subject and subjectivity”? These questions indicate the stakes involved in the struggle over whose images, voices, and lives count – and how they get counted – in the cacophony of a globalized audiovisual public sphere, and why historically and theoretically nuanced approaches to authors, authorship, and authoring agencies remain vital to the study of documentary and nonfiction media.

      1 Anon. (1905). Épreuves cinématographiques protégées par les lois de 1791 et 1902 en faveur de celui qui les a ordonées et composées, Le Droit d'auteur: organe official du Bureau de l'Union internationale pour la protection des œuvres littéraires et artistiques, 18(6), 76–77.

      2 Anon. (1928). Chez André Sauvage. Cinéa‐Ciné Pour Tous, 113, 19–20.

      3 Anon. (2006a). Laurent Chalet brise la glace. Association Française des directeurs de la photographie cinématographique (1 January). https://www.afcinema.com/Laurent‐Chalet‐brise‐la‐glace.html?lang=fr.

      4 Bazin, A. (1957). De la politique des auteurs. Cahiers du cinéma 70: 2–11.

      5 Cahill, J.L. (2015). Animal Photogénie: The Wild Side of French Film Theory's First Wave. In: Animal Life and the Moving Image (eds. M. Lawrence and L. McMahon), 23–41. London: Palgrave.

      6 Chris, C. and Gerstner, D.A. (2013). Introduction. In: Media Authorship (eds. C. Chris and D.A. Gerstner), 2–17. New York: Routledge.

      7 Doyen, E.‐L. (1899). Le Cinématographe et l'Enseignement de la Chirurgie. Revue Critique de Médecine et de Chirurgie 1 (1): 1–6.

      8 Fontaine, D. (2006). Deux qui ont raté la marche (de l'empereur). Le Canard enchaîné (22 March). Reprinted in La Lettre d'AFC, 154(1): https://www.afcinema.com/Deux‐qui‐ont‐rate‐la‐marche‐de‐l‐empereur.html?lang=fr.

      9 Gray, J. (2013). When Is the Author? In: A Companion to Media Authorship (eds. J. Grey and D. Johnson), 88–111. Malden, MA: Wiley.

      10 Grierson, J. (1971). First Principles of Documentary (1932–34). In: Grierson on Documentary (ed. F. Hardy), 145–156. New York: Praeger.

      11 Grierson, J. (2016). Documentary Producer (1931). In: The Documentary Film Reader (ed. J. Kahana), 215–216. New York: Oxford University Press.

      12 Gunning, T. (1997). Before Documentary: Early Nonfiction Films and the “View” Aesthetic. In: Uncharted Territory: Essays on Early Nonfiction Films (eds. D. Hertogs and N. de Klerk), 9–24. Amsterdam: Nederlands Filmmuseum.

      13 Lefebvre, T. (2004). La Chair et le celluloïd: Le cinéma chirurgical du docteur Doyen. Brionne: Jean Doyen.

      14 Lévi‐Strauss, C. (1964). Le Cru et le cuit. Paris: Plon.

      15 Matuszewski, B. (1898). Une Nouvelle Source de l'Histoire. Paris: Noizette et cie.

      16 Most, M. G. (2007). The Squabble and the Penguin: Icy Relations and Lawsuits over Credit for Oscar‐winning Doc. International Documentary Association (1 July). https://www.documentary.org/feature/squabble‐and‐penguin‐icy‐relations‐and‐lawsuits‐over‐credit‐oscar‐winning‐doc.

      17 Nesbit, M. (1987). What Was an Author? Yale French Studies 73: 229–257.

      18 Pang, L. (2013). Authorship Versus Ownership: the Case of Socialist China. In: Media Authorship (eds. C. Chris and D.A. Gerstner), 72–86. New York: Routledge.

      19 Renov, M. (2004). The Subject of Documentary. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

      20 Rosen, P. (2001). Change Mummified: Cinema, Historicity, Theory. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

      21 Vulser, N. (2006). La Marche de l'empereur a‐t‐elle deux réalisateurs? Le Monde (December 13). https://www.lemonde.fr/cinema/article/2006/12/13/la‐marche‐de‐l‐empereur‐a‐t‐elle‐deux‐realisateurs_845151_3476.html.

      Notes

      1 1 Tedesco's Vieux‐Colombier programming of newsreels, documentaries, pre‐war comedies, animal and science films, and experimental films had a strong historiographical dimension: he believed viewers would be educated and inspired by the accumulated history of film styles to not only become more demanding and informed spectators, but electrified makers of cinema's future.