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Werner Herzog and the Documentary as a Revelatory Practice

The result's identifiers

  • Result code in IS VaVaI

    <a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F00216275%3A25210%2F20%3A39916768" target="_blank" >RIV/00216275:25210/20:39916768 - isvavai.cz</a>

  • Result on the web

  • DOI - Digital Object Identifier

Alternative languages

  • Result language

    angličtina

  • Original language name

    Werner Herzog and the Documentary as a Revelatory Practice

  • Original language description

    In an interview with Paul Cronin, Werner Herzog states: “The word ‘documentary’ should be handled with care because we seem to have a very precise definition of what the word means”. Although Herzog himself is skeptical towards theoretical definitions of the concept of the documentary, and although he is reluctant to outline any clear methodology for his own work in film, I think that a closer look at his work will reveal some prominent features of what we call documentary film. Herzog’s work stands in contrast to a veridical tradition in both documentary film and theory, in which film is considered as a means of establishing facts and true descriptions of the world. This opens up a philosophical question, if we do not consider the documentary to be an epistemological category of veridical representations, what then makes a film documentary? In this proposed article I will examines the role of attention as a foundational faculty for the arts of photography and documentary depiction. When we pay attention to how the world looks, we might sometimes be surprised. We might perhaps be reminded that we are too set in our ways of seeing, and that the world can reveal things unknown, or as Stanley Cavell remarks: “how little we know about what our relation to reality is, our complicity in it”. I claim that this “revelatory” capacity of the photograph, its ability to show us things that we have failed to pay attention to due to our habitual ways of seeing, constitutes the aesthetics of documentary depiction. In order to arrive at this conclusion, I will examine how documentary depiction adheres to our experience, without falling back on a generic epistemological framework. This requires an explanation of how an image with a pictorial content can represent phenomenal qualities of perception. How can depiction show how we see, how we attend to the world and lived life, as it unfolds? My examples that will serve as a backdrop for this discussion are the documentary films of Werner Herzog. I will specifically discuss scenes from Wodabe – Herdsmen of the Sun, Echoes from a Sombre Empire, Bells from the Deep and White Diamond.

  • Czech name

  • Czech description

Classification

  • Type

    C - Chapter in a specialist book

  • CEP classification

  • OECD FORD branch

    60302 - Ethics (except ethics related to specific subfields)

Result continuities

  • Project

    <a href="/en/project/EF15_003%2F0000425" target="_blank" >EF15_003/0000425: Centre for Ethics</a><br>

  • Continuities

    P - Projekt vyzkumu a vyvoje financovany z verejnych zdroju (s odkazem do CEP)

Others

  • Publication year

    2020

  • Confidentiality

    S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů

Data specific for result type

  • Book/collection name

    The philosophy of Werner Herzog

  • ISBN

    978-1-79360-042-4

  • Number of pages of the result

    16

  • Pages from-to

    171-186

  • Number of pages of the book

    288

  • Publisher name

    Lexington Books

  • Place of publication

    Lanham

  • UT code for WoS chapter