POETICS AND POLITICS: A DOCUMENTARY RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM
http://poeticsandpolitics.ucsc.edu/
 
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CRUZ
MAY 15-17th, 2015
 
In April 2013, an international group of documentary scholars and 
scholar-practitioners assembled at Aalto University in Helsinki, Finland to 
participate in thePoetics and Politics of Documentary Research Symposium. The 
symposium was designed to both showcase and theorize non-fiction work from the 
zones between poetics and politics, image and word, theory and practice. The 
call for papers was aimed at researchers working on art-based, documentary 
research projects and it welcomed a wide range of proposals and approaches. The 
2013 conference provided invaluable context for a growing concern in the fields 
of film, media art and scholarship about documentary-based research that both 
troubles and reinvigorates the discrepant categories of scholarly “theory” and 
cultural “practice.” The second iteration of Poetics and Politics Documentary 
Research Symposium, which will take place May 15-17th, 2015 at the University 
of California Santa Cruz.
 
The 2015 symposium invites participants whose work frames, historicizes, or 
embodies questions about the various possible relations of theory to practice 
in documentary research. The symposium reflects a variety of approaches to 
documentary from a range of fields including film, video and new media, art 
practice, media and visual culture studies, visual anthropology and ethnography.
 
In recent years, post-structuralist, post-colonial and feminist thought have 
persuasively destabilized documentary as a fact-based, convention-bound and 
putatively objective social or scientific practice. We continue this critical 
approach by asking: what is the scope of documentary making as a political and 
poetic form? In line with the first iteration of this conference, we 
conceptualize documentary practice as encompassing multiple media and outcomes. 
We conceive ‘practice’ most broadly to include, without being limited to, 
moving image media, digital media, writing, photography, installation, 
performance, archiving and programming, among other forms, either as individual 
or hybrid practices in which more than a single medium are in dialogue. The 
symposium aims to provoke discussion on the scope of documentary making 
practices and aesthetics, to analyze and foster communities for its continuing 
critical practice. We aim to create innovative panels that will bring 
scholar-practitioners into conversation about making as thinking. Our keynote 
speakers are Anna Grimshaw (Emory University) and Kevin Jerome Everson 
(University of Virginia) who represent disparate yet interconnected approaches 
to documentary practice as research.

We seek proposals that explore documentary media in its current state of 
production, exhibition, context, culture, significance, and possibility. Of 
particular interest are proposals that conceptualize documentary practice as 
encompassing multiple media and outcomes. We especially seek proposals from 
documentary practitioners who conceive of their ‘practice’ most broadly to 
include — without being limited to — moving image media, digital media, sound, 
writing, programming, photography, archiving and installation among other 
forms, either as individual or hybrid practices in which more than a single 
medium are in dialogue. The symposium aims to provoke discussion on the scope 
of documentary practices and aesthetics, to analyze and foster communities for 
its continuing critical production and reception. We aim to create innovative 
panels that will bring scholar-practitioners into conversation about a variety 
of topics. This conference is an invitation to explore dialogues between 
creative practice and theoretical knowledge, indeed, as it imagines them to be 
related forms of intellectual work. Presentations are encouraged but not 
limited to the following inter-related categories:
 
Works-In-Progress
What kinds of epistemologies does documentary-making provoke? In this regard, 
we are especially interested in conversations around works-in-progress where 
practitioners can speak to the contingencies that shape documentary practices. 
Too often documentary media is seen as an exemplar or illustrative of a theory 
rather than as a mode of knowledge production in and of itself. These 
works-in-progress panels are designed to produce discussions in to the 
specificity of mediated scholarship:
• What are the disparities and/or coincidences of intent/aspiration and the 
real world contingencies of production?
• Within the context of a specific topic or research question, how does the 
image function as a sign, a polemic, or a poetic?
• How do the demands of rhetoric shift or confirm the demands of a particular 
time-based medium?
• What are the possible dialogues, overlaps, or acts of translation that occur 
between theory and practice, media production and writing?
• What is the epistemological value, if any, of an open-ended, inconclusive 
documentary text?
 
Poetics
• Is observation still an important or significant category for documentary 
media? How do we think with or outside of categories of immediacy and 
indexicality?
• What is the power of intangibility in relation to the documentary image?
• What kinds of aesthetics contest and emerge in a dialectical response to 
realist or even hyperrealist documentary practices such as reality TV or public 
broadcast documentary?
• What constitutes a speculative or a skeptical image?
• Can the recent turn of film theory into the field of phenomenology open new 
lines for redefining what constitutes documentary media? What practices shape 
tactile documentary? What is a non-fiction haptics? What are the values of such 
media interventions and how do those sit in relation with or contest 
traditional forms and classifications of documentary practice?
 
Politics
• What constitutes a political documentary practice? Is it different from a 
political documentary text?
• If we understand that documentary media is not necessarily limited to 
standard formats (feature-length film, educational documentary, web based, 
mixed media) then what interventions are documentary makers poised to construct 
in terms of documentary forms, aesthetics and knowledge? What are the relations 
between context and intervention?
• What are the implications of documentary authorship and the politics of 
representation. Given the rich histories of ethnography and the powerful 
interventions of, among others, postcolonial and feminist theory, what are 
productive and possible models for speaking for, with and nearby?
• What is the role of agency in non fiction practice? What is agency? Who or 
what can be agentic? In what contexts?
• What are the critical and/or aesthetic implications of producing a critical 
practice (which can include work across image and writing but is not limited to 
it)? What models do we work with and from, both historical and contemporary? 
What are the contexts, institutional and other, that enable or authorize this 
type of work?
 
 
 
Deadline for abstracts: January 5th, 2015
200-300 words. Please submit via the SUBMIT A PROPOSAL link.
 
For more information or inquiries, email: [email protected]
Conference registration fee: $45.00



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