Tag: Documentary

The Putin Interviews (Showtime Documentary Films)


Free Download The Putin Interviews (Showtime Documentary Films) by Oliver Stone, Robert Scheer
English | June 16, 2017 | ISBN: 1510733426 | 288 pages | PDF | 3.57 Mb
From Oscar-winner Oliver Stone comes a first-hand look at one of the most important, powerful, and controversial leaders in the world: Vladimir Putin of Russia. The companion to the news-breaking television series, this edition has substantial material not included in the documentary.

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Russian-Arab Worlds A Documentary History


Free Download Russian-Arab Worlds: A Documentary History by Eileen Kane, Masha Kirasirova, Margaret Litvin
English | June 28, 2023 | ISBN: 0197605761 | 408 pages | PDF | 16 Mb
The roots of the Arab world’s current Russian entanglements reach deep into the tsarist and Soviet periods. To explore those entanglements, this book presents and contextualizes a set of primary sources translated from Russian, Arabic, Armenian, Persian, French, and Tatar: a 1772 Russian naval officer’s diary, an Arabic slave sale deed from the Caucasus, an interview with a Russian-educated contemporary Syrian novelist, and many more. These archival, autobiographical, and literary sources, all appearing in English for the first time, are introduced by specialists and in some cases by pairs of scholars with complementary language expertise. They highlight connections long obscured by disciplinary cleavages between Slavic and Middle East studies.

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Mary Lincoln’s insanity case a documentary history


Free Download Mary Lincoln’s insanity case : a documentary history By Lincoln, Abraham; Lincoln, Mary Todd; Lincoln, Mary Todd; Emerson, Jason; Lincoln, Abraham
2012 | 237 Pages | ISBN: 0252037073 | PDF | 6 MB
In 1875 Mary Lincoln, the widow of a revered president, was committed to an insane asylum by her son, Robert. The trial that preceded her internment was a subject of keen national interest. The focus of public attention since Abraham Lincoln’s election in 1860, Mary Lincoln had attracted plentiful criticism and visible scorn from much of the public, who perceived her as spoiled, a spendthrift, and even too much of a Southern sympathizer. Widespread scrutiny only increased following her husband’s assassination in 1865 and her son Tad’s death six years later, after which her overwhelming grief led to the increasingly erratic behavior that led to her being committed to a sanitarium. A second trial a year later resulted in her release, but the stigma of insanity stuck. In the years since, questions emerged with new force, as the populace and historians debated whether she had been truly insane and subsequently cured, or if she was the victim of family maneuvering.In this volume, noted Lincoln scholar Jason Emerson provides a documentary history of Mary Lincoln’s mental illness and insanity case, evenhandedly presenting every possible primary source on the subject to enable a clearer view of the facts. Beginning with documents from the immediate aftermath of her husband’s assassination and ending with reminiscences by friends and family in the mid-twentieth century, Mary Lincoln’s Insanity Case: A Documentary History compiles more than one hundred letters, dozens of newspaper articles, editorials, and legal documents, and the daily patient progress reports from Bellevue Place Sanitarium during Mary Lincoln’s incarceration. Including many materials that have never been previously published, Emerson also collects multiple reminiscences, interviews, and diaries of people who knew Mary Lincoln or were involved in the case, including the first-hand recollection of one of the jurors in the 1875 insanity trial.Suggesting neither accusation nor exoneration of the embattled First Lady, Mary Lincoln’s Insanity Case: A Documentary History gives scholars and history enthusiasts incomparable access to the documents and information crucial to understanding this vexing chapter in American history.

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Mary Lincoln’s insanity case a documentary history


Free Download Mary Lincoln’s insanity case : a documentary history By Lincoln, Abraham; Lincoln, Mary Todd; Lincoln, Mary Todd; Emerson, Jason; Lincoln, Abraham
2012 | 237 Pages | ISBN: 0252037073 | PDF | 6 MB
In 1875 Mary Lincoln, the widow of a revered president, was committed to an insane asylum by her son, Robert. The trial that preceded her internment was a subject of keen national interest. The focus of public attention since Abraham Lincoln’s election in 1860, Mary Lincoln had attracted plentiful criticism and visible scorn from much of the public, who perceived her as spoiled, a spendthrift, and even too much of a Southern sympathizer. Widespread scrutiny only increased following her husband’s assassination in 1865 and her son Tad’s death six years later, after which her overwhelming grief led to the increasingly erratic behavior that led to her being committed to a sanitarium. A second trial a year later resulted in her release, but the stigma of insanity stuck. In the years since, questions emerged with new force, as the populace and historians debated whether she had been truly insane and subsequently cured, or if she was the victim of family maneuvering.In this volume, noted Lincoln scholar Jason Emerson provides a documentary history of Mary Lincoln’s mental illness and insanity case, evenhandedly presenting every possible primary source on the subject to enable a clearer view of the facts. Beginning with documents from the immediate aftermath of her husband’s assassination and ending with reminiscences by friends and family in the mid-twentieth century, Mary Lincoln’s Insanity Case: A Documentary History compiles more than one hundred letters, dozens of newspaper articles, editorials, and legal documents, and the daily patient progress reports from Bellevue Place Sanitarium during Mary Lincoln’s incarceration. Including many materials that have never been previously published, Emerson also collects multiple reminiscences, interviews, and diaries of people who knew Mary Lincoln or were involved in the case, including the first-hand recollection of one of the jurors in the 1875 insanity trial.Suggesting neither accusation nor exoneration of the embattled First Lady, Mary Lincoln’s Insanity Case: A Documentary History gives scholars and history enthusiasts incomparable access to the documents and information crucial to understanding this vexing chapter in American history.

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Filming Death End-of-Life Documentary Cinema


Free Download Outi Hakola, "Filming Death: End-of-Life Documentary Cinema"
English | ISBN: 1399523260 | 2024 | 256 pages | PDF | 17 MB
End-of-life documentaries have proliferated in the 21st century as various organisations, institutions, journalists, independent filmmakers, and members of the public have wanted to give death and dying a face in the public discussion.

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The Place of Poetics within Documentary Filmmaking


Free Download Keith Marley, "The Place of Poetics within Documentary Filmmaking"
English | ISBN: 1527518728 | 2023 | 244 pages | PDF | 3 MB
This collection aims to give insight to the reader as to how poetic approaches to documentary filmmaking have helped to develop the documentary form into a rich and diverse way of representing the real world in film. As such, it is the aesthetics of documentary filmmaking that becomes the primary focus of discussion within this collection. The majority of the chapters are written by documentary filmmakers who give insight into how poetics have influenced their own approach to documentary filmmaking, while other chapters are written by film scholars who analyse the work of others, in order to uncover how poetics are manifested in existing documentary films. This book will be of interest to those who produce documentary films, as well as those who have an interest in the work of other documentary filmmakers.

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Raymond Chandler A Documentary Volume


Free Download Robert F. Moss, "Raymond Chandler: A Documentary Volume (Dictionary of Literary Biography, 253)"
English | 2001 | ISBN: 0787652474 | PDF | pages: 436 | 36.5 mb
This award-winning multi-volume series is dedicated to making literature and its creators better understood and more accessible to students and interested readers, while satisfying the standards of librarians, teachers and scholars. Dictionary of Literary Biography provides reliable information in an easily comprehensible format, while placing writers in the larger perspective of literary history.

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Containing Multitudes A Documentary Reader of US History to 1877


Free Download Wesley Phelps, "Containing Multitudes: A Documentary Reader of US History to 1877"
English | ASIN : B0B351DFGY | 2022 | pages | EPUB | 14 MB
Containing Multitudes: A Documentary Reader of US History provides nearly two hundred primary documents that narrate aspects of US history from the period before European contact through the twenty-first century. Presented in two volumes, this curated selection-including letters, literature, journalism, and visual art-provides access to historical voices from a wide range of subject positions and belief systems.

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Jürgen Böttcher and Documentary Film


Free Download Elizabeth Daggett Matar, "Jürgen Böttcher and Documentary Film "
English | ISBN: 1032701242 | 2024 | 124 pages | EPUB, PDF | 973 KB + 8 MB
Jürgen Böttcher and Documentary Film introduces the reader to this east-German filmmaker who, despite having made 40 films from the east side of the Berlin Wall, is practically unknown.

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The Green Room #1 Reconsidering the Documentary and Contemporary Art


Free Download The Green Room #1: Reconsidering the Documentary and Contemporary Art By Maria Lind; Hito Steyerl
2008 | 239 Pages | ISBN: 1933128534 | PDF | 44 MB
Documentary practices make up one of the most significant and complex tendencies within art during the last two decades. Traditional documentary photography and film have been reinvented and reinvigorated by merging with traditions such as video, performance, and conceptual art. Such recent documentary works attest to a new diversity and complexity of forms, ranging from conceptual mockumentaries to reflexive photo essays, from split-screen slide shows to found-footage video reportage, from installations without any lens-based medium to printed matter. Many of them are about searching for suitable forms and methods for discussing social content, whether historical material or effects of recent political and economic upheaval.This anthology seeks to overcome the existing dispersion of texts on documentary practices and offer new perspectives on this crucial theme. Authors include T. J. Demos, Okwui Enwezor, Carles Guerra, Vít Havránek, Jörg Heiser, Stefan Jonsson, Maurizio Lazzarato, Olivier Lugon, Jean-Pierre Rehm, Hito Steyerl, and Jan Verwoert. They discuss issues such as what the function of documentary art forms is in the context of globalizing media and an expanding art world. What is the relationship between fact and fiction, media and mediation in these documentary practices? What role do the archive and activism play? How do the operations of documentary forms change in the age of digital reproduction? Being part of the research project "The Greenroom: Reconsidering the Documentary and Contemporary Art" at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, this publication functions similar to a greenroom at a television station, where staff and guests meet before and after filming and engage in discussions which often differ from those conducted in the limelight.

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