{"title":"Bodies in space: XR documentary in Australia","authors":"Kim Munro, Katy Morrison","doi":"10.1080/17503280.2022.2135166","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article discusses a selection of interactive and immersive works from the past twenty years in Australia and argues that these have emerged from a specific cultural and geographical perspective in relation to space and place. In the context of settler colonial or migrant Australians, who have fraught and unresolved relationships to place, technologies that intervene with and implicate the audience can further expand documentary's capacity to frame, interpret and challenge these relationships. In this article, we discuss five specific interactive and immersive Australian documentary works. Each of these projects re-frames an encounter with space and place through the methods by which the participant-as-audience is situated in relation to the subject matter and virtual environment. The article explores the controversial asylum-seeker documentary game, Escape From Woomera ([2003]. Australia: EFW Collective); Lynette Wallworth's Collisions which recounts the atomic bomb testing in the desert (2012); Oscar Raby's examination of history, identity and witnessing, Assent (2013); Joan Ross's examination of the colonial relationship to the environment in Did you ask the river? (2019) and Tyson Mowarin's VR of the Ngarluma people of North Western Australia and the threats to their culture and land in the VR work Thalu: Dreamtime is Now (2018).","PeriodicalId":43545,"journal":{"name":"Studies in Documentary Film","volume":"17 1","pages":"190 - 207"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Studies in Documentary Film","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17503280.2022.2135166","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT This article discusses a selection of interactive and immersive works from the past twenty years in Australia and argues that these have emerged from a specific cultural and geographical perspective in relation to space and place. In the context of settler colonial or migrant Australians, who have fraught and unresolved relationships to place, technologies that intervene with and implicate the audience can further expand documentary's capacity to frame, interpret and challenge these relationships. In this article, we discuss five specific interactive and immersive Australian documentary works. Each of these projects re-frames an encounter with space and place through the methods by which the participant-as-audience is situated in relation to the subject matter and virtual environment. The article explores the controversial asylum-seeker documentary game, Escape From Woomera ([2003]. Australia: EFW Collective); Lynette Wallworth's Collisions which recounts the atomic bomb testing in the desert (2012); Oscar Raby's examination of history, identity and witnessing, Assent (2013); Joan Ross's examination of the colonial relationship to the environment in Did you ask the river? (2019) and Tyson Mowarin's VR of the Ngarluma people of North Western Australia and the threats to their culture and land in the VR work Thalu: Dreamtime is Now (2018).
本文讨论了过去二十年来澳大利亚的互动和沉浸式作品,并认为这些作品是从与空间和地点有关的特定文化和地理角度出现的。在澳大利亚殖民者或移民的背景下,他们有令人担忧和未解决的关系,干预和暗示观众的技术可以进一步扩大纪录片的能力,以框架,解释和挑战这些关系。在这篇文章中,我们讨论了五个具体的互动和沉浸式澳大利亚纪录片作品。这些项目中的每一个都通过参与者作为观众与主题和虚拟环境的关系所处的方法,重新构建了与空间和地点的相遇。本文探讨了备受争议的寻求庇护者纪录片游戏《Escape From Woomera》([2003])。澳大利亚:EFW集团);Lynette Wallworth的《碰撞》(collision)讲述了沙漠中的原子弹试验(2012);奥斯卡·拉比对历史、身份和见证的审视,《同意》(2013);琼·罗斯在《你问河吗?(2019)和Tyson Mowarin在VR作品《Thalu: Dreamtime is Now》(2018)中讲述了澳大利亚西北部的Ngarluma人的VR以及他们的文化和土地所面临的威胁。
期刊介绍:
Studies in Documentary Film is the first refereed scholarly journal devoted to the history, theory, criticism and practice of documentary film. In recent years we have witnessed an increased visibility for documentary film through conferences, the success of general theatrical releases and the re-emergence of scholarship in documentary film studies. Studies in Documentary Film is a peer-reviewed journal.