Ryan Watson
Misericordia University, Fine Arts, Faculty Member
- Documentary (Film Studies), New Media, Interactive Documentary, Video Advocacy, Radicalism and the Left in the United States, Film Studies, and 29 moreDigital Pedagogy, Experimental Film, Digital Humanities, Digital Media, Film Theory, Human Rights Theory, Location-based media, Film and Media Studies, Witnessing, Memory and Trauma, Film History, Documentary Film, Critical and Cultural Theory, Giorgio Agamben, Digital Cinema, Avant-Garde Cinema, Communication Of Memory In Archives, Libraries And Museums, Hacktivism, Documentary Film and Video, Digital Culture, Web Cinema, Theories of Sovereignty, Agamben, Critical Theory, Jean Vigo, Chris Marker, Left-wing Radicalism, Social Justice, Occupy Movement, and Occupy Wall Streetedit
- I'm an Assistant Professor of Film and Visual Media in the Department of Fine Arts at Misericordia University in Dall... moreI'm an Assistant Professor of Film and Visual Media in the Department of Fine Arts at Misericordia University in Dallas, PA. I teach broadly in the areas of film/media history, theory, and aesthetics. My current research focuses on the efficacy and instrumentalization of global documentary practices, particularly as they intersect with advances in new and emerging media technologies, radical political movements, human rights, archives, and theories of witnessing and testimony. I'm working on a book project, based on this research, titled Militant Evidence: Documentary Media and Global Crises. In addition, I'm co-editing (with Sarah Hamblin) a special issue of Studies in Documentary Film on "Radical Documentary in the Globalized Age of New Media" which is forthcoming in 2019. My writing has been published or is forthcoming in Afterimage, Animation Journal, Cinema Journal, Feminist Media Studies, InVisible Culture, Studies in Documentary Film, Journal of Film and Video, and The Velvet Light Trap.edit
This essay analyzes two recent interactive documentary projects: Sharon Daniel’s Public Secrets (2006), an exploration of the prison industrial complex through the testimonies of female inmates in California, and Zohar Kfir’s Points of... more
This essay analyzes two recent interactive documentary projects: Sharon Daniel’s Public Secrets (2006), an exploration of the prison industrial complex through the testimonies of female inmates in California, and Zohar Kfir’s Points of View (2014) which “maps” Palestinian video advocacy projects made for and/or disseminated by B’Tselem, a human rights organization working in the occupied territories. I argue that the interactive documentary form, as deployed by Daniel and Kfir, draws on the legacies of radical documentary practice, but offers new possibilities for engagement and intervention. The interactive documentary form functions as a structuring device for a wealth of affectively powerful witnesses, testimonies, and varied forms of evidence. This essay explores how interactive documentaries allow viewers/users a multi-faceted affective encounter with a range of subjects and evidence. This form, in concert with a radical political stance, I argue, is a locus for the representation of and viewer/user critical engagement with broad systemic problems, renders visible hidden structures of violence and power, and engenders an “affective radicality” that moves viewers/users into larger networks of political discourse, militant activism, and practices of resistance.
Full article available here: http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/uTaQbTtPsypKtcu6TZB2/full
Full article available here: http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/uTaQbTtPsypKtcu6TZB2/full
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A review of Pooja Rangan. Immediations: The Humanitarian Impulse in Documentary. Durham: Duke University Press, 2017.
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A review of: W.J.T. Mitchell, Bernard Harcourt, and Michael Taussig. Occupy: Three Inquiries in Disobedience. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 2013. Paperback. 152 pp. See:... more
A review of:
W.J.T. Mitchell, Bernard Harcourt, and Michael Taussig. Occupy: Three Inquiries in Disobedience. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 2013. Paperback. 152 pp.
See: http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/occupy-three-inquiries-in-disobedience/
W.J.T. Mitchell, Bernard Harcourt, and Michael Taussig. Occupy: Three Inquiries in Disobedience. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 2013. Paperback. 152 pp.
See: http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/occupy-three-inquiries-in-disobedience/
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
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Art and Activism course syllabus
