A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson

The documentary text, a relative newcomer to the textual armoury of subject English, has received remarkably limited theoretical discussion. It therefore provides an interesting opportunity for the contemporary researcher concerned with the reading/viewing practices that constitute modern textual st...

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Main Author: Bender, Stuart
Format: Journal Article
Published: AATE 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://search.informit.com.au/fullText;dn=454433257039271;res=IELHSS
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23555
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author Bender, Stuart
author_facet Bender, Stuart
author_sort Bender, Stuart
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description The documentary text, a relative newcomer to the textual armoury of subject English, has received remarkably limited theoretical discussion. It therefore provides an interesting opportunity for the contemporary researcher concerned with the reading/viewing practices that constitute modern textual study. This paper first presents an historical overview of the teaching of documentary texts in Western Australian secondary English classrooms. It is then argued that an alternative mode of study – drawn from existing research in the adjacent field of film studies – caters for a more balanced means of textual inquiry, unscrambling the documentary lesson to more evenly distribute attention across the three practices of the English curriculum; rhetorical instruction, ethical training and aesthetic cultivation.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-235552017-01-30T12:37:58Z A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson Bender, Stuart historical-philology pedagogy English education film studies documentary The documentary text, a relative newcomer to the textual armoury of subject English, has received remarkably limited theoretical discussion. It therefore provides an interesting opportunity for the contemporary researcher concerned with the reading/viewing practices that constitute modern textual study. This paper first presents an historical overview of the teaching of documentary texts in Western Australian secondary English classrooms. It is then argued that an alternative mode of study – drawn from existing research in the adjacent field of film studies – caters for a more balanced means of textual inquiry, unscrambling the documentary lesson to more evenly distribute attention across the three practices of the English curriculum; rhetorical instruction, ethical training and aesthetic cultivation. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23555 http://search.informit.com.au/fullText;dn=454433257039271;res=IELHSS AATE restricted
spellingShingle historical-philology
pedagogy
English education
film studies
documentary
Bender, Stuart
A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title_full A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title_fullStr A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title_full_unstemmed A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title_short A persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
title_sort persistent practice : the problem of the documentary lesson
topic historical-philology
pedagogy
English education
film studies
documentary
url http://search.informit.com.au/fullText;dn=454433257039271;res=IELHSS
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23555