Journalism 286 History of Documentary Spring 2020 3 units, Wed 2:00pm - 5:00pm, Production Lab, Room 101 Carrie Lozano, Lecturer office hours: I will provide a link for office hours appointments in bcourses. (email)
[email protected] Julia Sizek, Reader
[email protected] Course Description History of Documentary covers the evolution of primarily American documentary film from the first moving images to the present. We will focus on both commissioned and independent films, produced for a variety of distribution models including theatrical, broadcast and digital. Where possible, we will also discuss international documentaries, the current documentary landscape, and big-picture field and career insights. Please note that this course is prerequisite for graduate students who intend to enroll in the documentary thesis seminar in their second year. In addition to a historical and genre overview, we will concentrate on the practicalities of producing non-fiction documentaries for broad audiences, and on documentary materials, structure, genre, points-of-view and ethics. Considering issues of representation, race, class, gender, identity and power, we will debate and deconstruct the ways in which documentary film has both upheld and challenged some of the U.S.’s most entrenched and problematic narratives. The class’ success demands that students keep up with screening, reading and writing. I hope the class will be fun, interesting, inspiring, and occasionally paradigm shifting as we delve into deep philosophical, creative and journalism questions. House Rules Class starts at 2pm sharp on Wednesdays in the TV Lab, adjourning at 5:00pm. This syllabus is a living document and will change from time to time.