Documentary Making for Digital Humanists.
This fluent and comprehensive field guide responds to increased interest, across the humanities, in the ways in which digital technologies can disrupt and open up new research and pedagogical avenues. It is designed to help scholars and students engage with their subjects using an audio-visual gramm...
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cambridge, UK :
Open Book Publishers,
2021.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | Open Field Guides Series
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Introduction
- 1. The Humanist Auteur
- The Digital Wave (and the Power It Gives Us)
- Film as Scholarly Tool
- The Filmmaker-Scholar
- The Filmmaker-Scholar as Auteur
- Looking for Charlie
- 2. Learning to Love the Camera
- 3. The Production Process
- Pre-Production
- Production
- Post-Production
- 4. Concept and Planning
- Schema One - Essay Films
- Schema Two - Discussion/Interview Films
- Schema Three - Full-Production Films
- Schema Four - Subjective Explorations
- Achievability
- Case Study - Signals
- Planning
- 5. Collaboration
- 6. Precedent
- 7. Choosing Your Filmmaking Equipment
- Smartphone Kit (100-1,000)
- DSLR Kit (300-5,000)
- 8. Core Methods
- Stabilise your Camera
- Focus your Camera on your Subject
- Compose your Shots
- Plan to Capture Contextual Footage
- Take Control of your Camera's Settings
- 9. Settings, Lenses, Focus, and Exposure
- Camera Settings
- Lenses
- Stylised Focus
- Exposure
- Summary
- 10. Composing a Shot - Tips and Techniques
- Head Room
- Looking Room
- The 30° and 180° Rules
- Fundamentals
- 11. Shots and Compositions Considered
- 12. The Visual Language of Cinema
- Frame Rate
- Vulnerability, Strength, and Significance through Camera Angles
- Wide Shots, Close-Ups, Mid-Shots
- Aspect Ratios
- 13. Interviews
- Oral History andInterviewing
- Designing an Interview
- Formulating Interview Questions
- The Phrasing of Questions
- The Role of the Interviewer
- The Interviewer/Subject Relationship
- The Ethics of Interviewing
- The Interview Process
- Participant Information Sheet Template
- Informed Consent Form Template
- 14. Recording Audio and Creating Soundscapes
- Recording Sound on Site
- Rough and Ready
- Lavaliere Microphones
- Run and Gun
- Clipping
- On-Site Tips
- Engineering Ambience
- Voice-Overs and Commentary.
- 15. Light
- Core Rules
- Hard Light and Soft Light
- Lights and Lighting
- Lighting Quick-Reference Guide
- 16. Camera Movement
- Going Handheld
- Handheld Tracking
- Camera Pans and Tilts
- Dolly Shot
- Tripod Dolly
- 17. The Two-Page Film School
- 18. Post-Mortem: Making a Short Documentary about the 2016 Presidential Election
- Pre-Production
- Production
- Post-Production
- Aftermath
- 19. Post-Production Workflow
- Review your Footage
- (Re)Consider your Audience's Relationship to the Film
- Plan a Working-Structure for your Film
- Begin Creating a Rough Cut
- Step Back
- Critically Review and Reassess
- Post-Mortem
- Refine Your Rough Cut
- Step Back, Review Your Fine Cut and Reassess
- Reflections
- 20. The Three-Act Structure
- 21. The Protagonist
- Harmon's Story Embryo
- Casting the Audience as the Protagonist
- The On-Screen Protagonist - The Journey
- 22. Assembly
- Editing
- Colour-Grading
- Sound-Tracking
- 23. Editing Workflow in Adobe Premiere Pro
- Step One: How to Start a New Project
- Step Two: Get to Know the Premiere Workspace
- Step Three: Import Video and Audio Clips into your Project
- Step Four: Move Clips into your Timeline
- Step Five: Shorten a Clip
- Step Six: Moving Clips Around the Timeline
- Step Seven: Cutting Between Clips
- Step Eight: Remove Unwanted Sound-tracks
- Step Nine: Add a New Sound-track
- Step Ten: Add On-Screen Text
- Step Eleven: Saving Your Project
- Step Twelve: Exporting Your Project
- Step Thirteen (Optional): Colour-Grading Your Project
- 24. Distribution and Dissemination
- Theatrical Release
- Digital Streaming
- Freely Accessible Digital Streaming
- Bibliography
- Illustrations.