Abstract
In his groundbreaking study of “autobiography in film and video” (as per the author’s own description of his work), Michael Renov speaks of the emergence of a new subjectivity in documentary productions of the 1980s and 1990s as the construction of “a self, typically a deeply social self” (2004, 178). What is new about this subjectivity, he explains, is that it does not reject the collective: “current documentary self-inscription enacts identities—fluid, multiple, even contradictory—while remaining fully embroiled with public discourses” (178). This process accounts for the surfacing of new identities in the cinematic sphere of American post-modernity: gay and lesbian, African American, and immigrant or exilic identities will be of particular interest to Renov. Although it goes beyond a study of the inscription of identity politics in the American documentary, The Subject of Documentary could be seen as the most accomplished articulation of a poetics and rhetoric of postmodern documentary, in a context “in which politics were not so much abandoned as transformed” (171).
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