Documenting International Relations: Documentary Film and the Creative Arrangement of Perceptibility

Rens van Munster, Casper Sylvest

    Research output: Articles: Journal and NewspaperJournal ArticleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    International Relations (IR) is taking a stronger interest in visual practices and representations both as popular imaginaries that shape how we understand and act in the world and as vehicles for teaching empirical events and abstract concepts. The genre of documentary film has, however, received virtually no attention, which is striking given the last decade's explosion of widely circulated documentaries revolving around questions of central importance to IR. In this article we argue that IR needs to take documentary film-making seriously as a separate and significant medium of representation that—moving smoothly between fact and fiction, education and entertainment—directly intervenes in international politics by laying claim to (parts of) truth and reality. To this end, we introduce an analytical framework based on the idea of arrangements of perceptibility, a term that refers to the creative arrangement of sensorial perceptions (saying and showing) in documentary film. We distinguish between three such arrangements, each characterized by a specific theoretical modality (reality, truth, doubt), educational model (instruction, facilitation, problematization), and political efficacy (exposition, disclosure, destabilization). This framework enables a critical analysis of the politics of documentary film, which we demonstrate through a reading of recent documentary films about global politics.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalInternational Studies Perspectives
    Volume16
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)229
    Number of pages245
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • documentary film
    • cinematic IR
    • global politics
    • perceptibility
    • visuality

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