- Title
- The filmmakers' research perspectives: an overview of Australian and UK filmmaking research
- Creator
- Kerrigan, Susan; Callaghan, Joanna
- Relation
- Australian Screen Production Education and Research Association Annual Conference (ASPERA 2016). Refereed Proceedings: Australian Screen Production Education and Research Association (ASPERA) 2016 Annual Conference (Canberra, A.C.T. 5-7 July, 2016)
- Relation
- http://aspera.asn.au/?p=805
- Publisher
- Australian Screen Production Education and Research Association (ASPERA)
- Resource Type
- conference paper
- Date
- 2016
- Description
- Filmmaking research is part of the broader practice research paradigm - known as practice-led, practice-based and creative practice research - where films are created as research outputs in fiction, documentary and hybrid forms. Filmmaking researchers' enquiries into production practices, techniques, modes and genres used in cinema, television and online have been successfully conducted using filmmaking as a primary research method. This paper sets out to explore the approaches used in filmmaking research that have been adopted in Australia and the UK, to identify the similarities and differences between the two research environments by looking at nine sample research projects. The sample projects illustrate the diversity of films as research outputs, where some are made as a means of exploring theoretical perspectives, like "The Brisbane Line" (Maher 2011) and "Love in the Post" (Callaghan 2014). Others were created as part of larger interdisciplinary research projects, for example "Using Fort Scratchley" (Kerrigan 2008a) saw communication and history academics work together. With the series "Reducing Bullying: Evidence Based Strategies for Schools" (Wotherspoon 2006), social scientists and film production academics created a series of films used to initiate classroom discussions around acceptable social behaviours. The common element in the sample projects is that filmmaking was used as a research method, even though each project used a different methodology. By presenting the historical approaches to filmmaking from a qualitative paradigm and illustrating a variety of contemporary research outputs generated through the creative practice paradigms, this paper discusses the unique research insights that can be gained from the position of a filmmaking-researcher. Discussing these perspectives helps build discipline knowledge about filmmaking practice as research and includes approaches that strengthen the insider's perspective that a filmmaking-researcher can take.
- Subject
- filmmaking research; Australian films; creative practice research
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1340714
- Identifier
- uon:28549
- Identifier
- ISBN:9780994336538
- Language
- eng
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