{"title":"介绍","authors":"G. Hambly, Anna. Dzenis","doi":"10.1080/17503175.2023.2228612","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Welcome to this special dossier on ‘Disruptive Narrative Practices’ for the Studies in Australasian Cinema journal. In contemporary screen culture and screen production, we are very familiar with the phrase ‘digital disruption’ which is currently going through exponential upheavals and disruptions with the recent widespread uptake of AI technologies. However, ‘disruption’ in cinema storytelling has a lineage as long as cinema itself. ‘Disruption’ in cinema’s forms and storytelling modes have pushed the boundaries of how narratives are constructed, presented on screen, and disseminated, throughout cinema’s history. In the call for papers for this dossier, we were interested in examining disruption across the spectrum of traditional industry narrative frameworks and script development approaches. We invited essays on disruptive narrative practices in terms of diversity, the border of the factual and the fictive, concepts of authenticity and inauthenticity, intermediality in narrative projects, auto-fiction and the new uses of archival practices in screen forms. The essays selected for this dossier explore disruptions in multiple ways, in experimental films, feature films and television series. In ‘Disrupting the Self: Fictive Dialogic Inquiry into Transformative Screenwriting Practices’, Louise Sawtell and Sue Cake weave the notion of disruption into the form of the essay itself. Drawn from conversations between them conducted on zoom and written up as a lively, informal interchange, the essay critically reflects on their personal experience of script development within the academy. They argue it provides a creative haven for writers to discover new possibilities and reinvent their voice free of the pressures imposed by prescriptive industrial practices. Phoebe Hart brings a similar, personal approach to her essay ‘Playful Hybrids: Documentary Filmmakers Forging Disruptive Narratives’, in which she reflects on her teaching practice in relation to hybrid documentaries. The disruptive docufiction form, which merges fact and fantasy, throws up thorny questions for teachers and students alike: How do you balance creativity and ethics in a period deemed ‘post truth’? What are the practical and ethical challenges of doing so? In her paper, Hart outlines her approach to answering these difficult questions. The theme of disruption and hybridity in documentary continues in Sean Maher and Sue Cake’s ‘Innovation in True Crime Series: Generic Transformations in Documentary Series’. The authors chart how streaming, bingeing, big data and content-based algorithms combined to create a new multi-episode documentary form within the true crime genre. This docuseries form employs narrative conventions from long series","PeriodicalId":51952,"journal":{"name":"Studies in Australasian Cinema","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Introduction\",\"authors\":\"G. Hambly, Anna. Dzenis\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/17503175.2023.2228612\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Welcome to this special dossier on ‘Disruptive Narrative Practices’ for the Studies in Australasian Cinema journal. In contemporary screen culture and screen production, we are very familiar with the phrase ‘digital disruption’ which is currently going through exponential upheavals and disruptions with the recent widespread uptake of AI technologies. However, ‘disruption’ in cinema storytelling has a lineage as long as cinema itself. ‘Disruption’ in cinema’s forms and storytelling modes have pushed the boundaries of how narratives are constructed, presented on screen, and disseminated, throughout cinema’s history. In the call for papers for this dossier, we were interested in examining disruption across the spectrum of traditional industry narrative frameworks and script development approaches. We invited essays on disruptive narrative practices in terms of diversity, the border of the factual and the fictive, concepts of authenticity and inauthenticity, intermediality in narrative projects, auto-fiction and the new uses of archival practices in screen forms. The essays selected for this dossier explore disruptions in multiple ways, in experimental films, feature films and television series. In ‘Disrupting the Self: Fictive Dialogic Inquiry into Transformative Screenwriting Practices’, Louise Sawtell and Sue Cake weave the notion of disruption into the form of the essay itself. Drawn from conversations between them conducted on zoom and written up as a lively, informal interchange, the essay critically reflects on their personal experience of script development within the academy. They argue it provides a creative haven for writers to discover new possibilities and reinvent their voice free of the pressures imposed by prescriptive industrial practices. Phoebe Hart brings a similar, personal approach to her essay ‘Playful Hybrids: Documentary Filmmakers Forging Disruptive Narratives’, in which she reflects on her teaching practice in relation to hybrid documentaries. The disruptive docufiction form, which merges fact and fantasy, throws up thorny questions for teachers and students alike: How do you balance creativity and ethics in a period deemed ‘post truth’? What are the practical and ethical challenges of doing so? In her paper, Hart outlines her approach to answering these difficult questions. The theme of disruption and hybridity in documentary continues in Sean Maher and Sue Cake’s ‘Innovation in True Crime Series: Generic Transformations in Documentary Series’. The authors chart how streaming, bingeing, big data and content-based algorithms combined to create a new multi-episode documentary form within the true crime genre. 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Welcome to this special dossier on ‘Disruptive Narrative Practices’ for the Studies in Australasian Cinema journal. In contemporary screen culture and screen production, we are very familiar with the phrase ‘digital disruption’ which is currently going through exponential upheavals and disruptions with the recent widespread uptake of AI technologies. However, ‘disruption’ in cinema storytelling has a lineage as long as cinema itself. ‘Disruption’ in cinema’s forms and storytelling modes have pushed the boundaries of how narratives are constructed, presented on screen, and disseminated, throughout cinema’s history. In the call for papers for this dossier, we were interested in examining disruption across the spectrum of traditional industry narrative frameworks and script development approaches. We invited essays on disruptive narrative practices in terms of diversity, the border of the factual and the fictive, concepts of authenticity and inauthenticity, intermediality in narrative projects, auto-fiction and the new uses of archival practices in screen forms. The essays selected for this dossier explore disruptions in multiple ways, in experimental films, feature films and television series. In ‘Disrupting the Self: Fictive Dialogic Inquiry into Transformative Screenwriting Practices’, Louise Sawtell and Sue Cake weave the notion of disruption into the form of the essay itself. Drawn from conversations between them conducted on zoom and written up as a lively, informal interchange, the essay critically reflects on their personal experience of script development within the academy. They argue it provides a creative haven for writers to discover new possibilities and reinvent their voice free of the pressures imposed by prescriptive industrial practices. Phoebe Hart brings a similar, personal approach to her essay ‘Playful Hybrids: Documentary Filmmakers Forging Disruptive Narratives’, in which she reflects on her teaching practice in relation to hybrid documentaries. The disruptive docufiction form, which merges fact and fantasy, throws up thorny questions for teachers and students alike: How do you balance creativity and ethics in a period deemed ‘post truth’? What are the practical and ethical challenges of doing so? In her paper, Hart outlines her approach to answering these difficult questions. The theme of disruption and hybridity in documentary continues in Sean Maher and Sue Cake’s ‘Innovation in True Crime Series: Generic Transformations in Documentary Series’. The authors chart how streaming, bingeing, big data and content-based algorithms combined to create a new multi-episode documentary form within the true crime genre. This docuseries form employs narrative conventions from long series