Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session

Course Description

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In this class, we will make as well as analyze documentaries that focus on science and engineering broadly defined. One of the classic contributions of the discipline of science and technology studies (STS) has been to consider science not simply in terms of its end product, (i.e. what it learns or makes), but as a social process in its own right. Who becomes a scientist or an engineer and why? What are the social milieus that shape the kinds of projects scientists engage in? What are the everyday social and work practices of scientists and engineers? What are the settings in which science and engineering are done? What are the implications of engineering and scientific practices in societal terms? In terms of everyday life? How might they differ from public preconceptions about "science"? In this class, we seek to break down rigid distinctions between analysis and doing not only for the fields of science and engineering, but for documentary film and video. In short, just as science studies scholars focus on science as a social process, in this class we will consider documentary filmmaking as a form of social practice in which it is impossible to separate out theory from the making of films. Like STS studies more broadly, we will consider how the social conditions in which documentary films are made are an intrinsic part of their meaning.

In this class, we will ask a range of questions: What kinds of historically changing ideas about "truth" or reality come to be encapsulated in documentary film? How do these ideas emerge in particular ways in films about science and engineering? In what ways have scientists and engineers sought to use non-fiction film and how have they been portrayed in them? What kinds of narratives about science and technology have documentary filmmakers employed and what have been their effects upon their audiences? How have historical changes in technologies relating to film and video transformed the kinds of films - and their meanings - that have been made? What kinds of relationships are at work among filmmakers, subjects, and audiences? How do visual images and what they can capture differ from what can be captured in the written word? How do documentary films about science shape – and, in turn, come to be shaped by - other forms of filmmaking or analysis? How do they affect how we think about the larger social worlds in which we live?

From our vantage point within MIT, we will explore what video cameras allow us to capture about the social worlds of science and engineering. How might cameras encourage us to rethink what it's like to work in a laboratory? What might we learn by filming the process of conceiving and engineering a new kind of robot or a solar-powered vehicle or a clean water technology for developing countries? How can cameras help us capture the symbolic meanings of "science" through documenting the architectural layout of MIT or the tourists who pour through the infinite corridor? How might video help us capture how science and technology become part of everyday worlds far beyond MIT, from community health programs, to the circulation of garbage on and off campus, to the far-flung social settings in which inventions made by D-Lab students may operate?

The class meets twice a week for three hours. Wednesday classes will focus on documentary film analysis and we will watch clips of classic documentaries particularly those focusing on science. Friday's class is devoted to a lab focusing on video production. Students will engage in short production exercises that will familiarize them with video equipment and will also allow them to understand the theoretical discussions at a deeper level. Students will also engage in a final project that will track some aspect of science and engineering (broadly defined) in practice. Given the limited scope of this class, we can only offer a taste of the full-fledged production process. However, we hope that this class can offer a stimulating foray into the social worlds of documentary filmmaking.

Requirements

Attendance in class is crucial. Class content and particularly production experience cannot be replicated outside of class-time. Course materials must be read for the assigned day in class.

Assignments

Class assignments include:

  1. One 3–5 page paper in which students should discuss the readings and offer in-depth discussion of relevant films in their paper. (30% of total grade),
  2. Video Homework exercises and class participation (30% of total grade)
  3. Final projects (40% of total grade). If you're happy with the outcome of your final video project this is all you need submit. If you are not completely satisfied with the final project, you can submit a 5 page paper along with the video project, outlining what you tried to do, how you went about it, why it didn't fully capture what you were trying to do, and possibilities for reworking the video that could address the issues you raise. You will be graded on the paper as well as the final project (i.e. even if the final project isn't a complete success, you can still earn a good grade by offering a perceptive, well-argued analysis of what can be learned from this experience).

Readings

Required Books

Buy at Amazon Barnouw, Eric. Documentary: A History of the Non-fiction Film. 2nd ed. Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN: 9780195078985. [Preview with Google Books]

Buy at Amazon Ascher, Steven, and Edward Pincus. The Filmmaker's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide for the Digital Age: 2013 Edition. Plume Publishers/Penguin, 2012. ISBN: 9780452297289.

Buy at Amazon Brenneis, Lisa, and M. Wohl. Final Cut Pro X: Visual QuickStart Guide. Peachpit Press, 2011. ISBN: 9780321774668. [Preview with Google Books]

Readings in these books are complemented by selections from other books and journals. Graduate students are expected to read additional papers and chapters each week.

On lab days, there is often optional background reading on camera and filmmaking techniques or Final Cut Pro®. This is truly optional. You will be given instruction on how to use the equipment and editing software during class time. The Filmmaker's Handbook and Final Cut Pro X: Visual QuickPro Guide are intended as reference guides if you need assistance figuring out a problem (with designated chapters to suggest likely places to look for aid). You are not expected to read these chapters straight through.

Films

Each class lecture session includes time for screening excerpts of films along with class discussion. Students are strongly encouraged to view the complete versions of the these films outside of class time.

Equipment

Recording

We have several recording kits that students can borrow. Each consists of a camera, tripod, audio kit (including lavalier microphone, boom pole, shotgun microphone, and headphones), and an external computer hard drive. (Please note that the hard drives are extremely delicate and take care when transporting them).

You will need to sign out and return the equipment with Dave Stripinis. Camera and audio equipment must be returned within 48 hours (or by Monday if borrowing over the weekend) to our equipment room and in the condition in which it was received. You will be able to sign out and return equipment at specified times on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Further procedures for borrowing and caring for equipment will be discussed in class.

Editing

Students will be able to access editing equipment in two places.

  • Two Mac computers will be available for students in this class in our equipment room, to be scheduled with one of the instructors or the TA.
  • Editing equipment (Mac computers loaded with Final Cut Pro) is also available at the MIT New Media Center.

Calendar

Session Key:

Lec = Lecture
Lab = Lab

SES # TOPICS ASSIGNMENTS
LEC 1 Introduction: Doing science and making documentary-film  
LAB 1 Introduction to the camera with in-class exercise  
LEC 2 Documentary and ways of seeing  
LAB 2

Screen camera exercises

Introduction to sound with in-class exercise

Lab 2 homework: short production exercise in which students shoot a scene
LEC 3 Science and seeing  
LAB 3 Exercise: MIT Infinite Corridor walk  
LEC 4 Ethnographic film as science and beyond: from narration to dialogue Paper due two days before LEC 4
LAB 4 Production exercise: shoot a scene with sound and picture  
LEC 5 Ethnographic film: the work of Jean Rouch  
LAB 5 Introduction to editing Lab 5 homework: edit a previously shot scene
LEC 6 Filmmaking as process; Direct Cinema  
LAB 6 Screen Lab 5 editing homework Lab 6 homework: Direct Cinema exercise
LEC 7 The Interview: Errol Morris' window onto science  
LAB 7

Screen Lab 6 Direct Cinema homework

Interviewing techniques

Lab 7 homework: interview exercise
LEC 8 New directions in ethnographic film: Sensory ethnographic approaches  
LAB 8

Screen Lab 7 interview homework

Present 3 ideas for final projects

 
LEC 9 Reflecting (on) Nature: The power of documentary narrative  
LAB 9 Present final film project ideas  
LEC 10 Science and the environment: alternative ways of knowing  
LAB 10 Introduction to lighting (with guest instructor David Tames)  
LEC 11 Picturing science: The personal, the political and the virtual  
LAB 11 New online interactive documentary formats  
LEC 12 Documentary filmmaking as process  
LEC 13 Other worlds: From science fact to science fiction and back again  
LAB 12 Screen rough cuts of final projects (1/2 class); continue editing in the MIT New Media Center  
LEC 14 Editing of final projects; individual meetings  
LAB 13 Editing of final projects; individual meetings (cont.)  
LEC 15 Screen final projects