Documenting the air
Documenting the air
The air sustains, connects and conditions our lives and has been of growing relevance to social scientists adopting an atmospheric approach to social life. Nonetheless, in screen studies, air’s critical uptake has so far been limited to narrative cinema, leaving it undertheorized in non-fiction filmmaking. In this paper, I introduce theories of the air that flow from the broader rise of atmospheric socio-aesthetic theories and suggest that it is possible to understand the air as an agent in the relationship between a filmmaker and their practice, and the film and its viewers. To make this argument, I first present a theoretical orientation to air as it is implicated in the non-fiction filmmaking process, before considering how the air has been understood in film scholarship, and how it has been taken as a subject of filmmakers working in experimental traditions. I then consider two bodies of non-fiction filmmaking through this aethereal lens. The first is Margaret Tait and her concept of ‘breathing’ with the camera, and the second is Arwa Aburawa and Turab Shah’s And Still, It Remains (2023). In these analyses, I argue that thinking aethereally allows us to consider the co-construction of documentarian, document and viewer.
Air, Margaret tait, artists' moving image, atmosphere, documentary film
243-256
Harris, Laura
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Harris, Laura
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Abstract
The air sustains, connects and conditions our lives and has been of growing relevance to social scientists adopting an atmospheric approach to social life. Nonetheless, in screen studies, air’s critical uptake has so far been limited to narrative cinema, leaving it undertheorized in non-fiction filmmaking. In this paper, I introduce theories of the air that flow from the broader rise of atmospheric socio-aesthetic theories and suggest that it is possible to understand the air as an agent in the relationship between a filmmaker and their practice, and the film and its viewers. To make this argument, I first present a theoretical orientation to air as it is implicated in the non-fiction filmmaking process, before considering how the air has been understood in film scholarship, and how it has been taken as a subject of filmmakers working in experimental traditions. I then consider two bodies of non-fiction filmmaking through this aethereal lens. The first is Margaret Tait and her concept of ‘breathing’ with the camera, and the second is Arwa Aburawa and Turab Shah’s And Still, It Remains (2023). In these analyses, I argue that thinking aethereally allows us to consider the co-construction of documentarian, document and viewer.
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Documenting the air
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 October 2024
Keywords:
Air, Margaret tait, artists' moving image, atmosphere, documentary film
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Local EPrints ID: 496056
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496056
PURE UUID: e95ffce1-3045-4052-b120-a0b9da5778f3
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Date deposited: 02 Dec 2024 17:43
Last modified: 21 Aug 2025 02:42
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Author:
Laura Harris
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