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Reenacting Ryan: The Fantasmatic and the Animated Documentary

Reenacting Ryan: The Fantasmatic and the Animated Documentary In this article, the author discusses the animated documentary in relation to the use of staged reenactments in works that are generally understood as documentaries. His conceptual foundation draws especially on recent work by Bill Nichols on documentary reenactments, which he argues have specific ‘fantasmatic’ and reflexive qualities. These qualities clearly dovetail with key attributes of animation, with the animated documentary standing as a significant and interestingly hybrid creative form. Key ideas are applied to a case study of Chris Landreth’s Ryan (2004), in which Landreth deploys fantasmatic visual flourishes partly in order to destabilize the documentary’s conventional discourse of sobriety, pushing it in the direction of its mirroring discourse of delirium, and partly to explore the current status of animation (and animation tools) in the realm of visual simulation. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal SAGE

Reenacting Ryan: The Fantasmatic and the Animated Documentary

Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal , Volume 6 (3): 16 – Nov 1, 2011

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Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© SAGE Publications 2011
ISSN
1746-8477
eISSN
1746-8485
DOI
10.1177/1746847711416561
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In this article, the author discusses the animated documentary in relation to the use of staged reenactments in works that are generally understood as documentaries. His conceptual foundation draws especially on recent work by Bill Nichols on documentary reenactments, which he argues have specific ‘fantasmatic’ and reflexive qualities. These qualities clearly dovetail with key attributes of animation, with the animated documentary standing as a significant and interestingly hybrid creative form. Key ideas are applied to a case study of Chris Landreth’s Ryan (2004), in which Landreth deploys fantasmatic visual flourishes partly in order to destabilize the documentary’s conventional discourse of sobriety, pushing it in the direction of its mirroring discourse of delirium, and partly to explore the current status of animation (and animation tools) in the realm of visual simulation.

Journal

Animation: An Interdisciplinary JournalSAGE

Published: Nov 1, 2011

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