Laissez-Faire Storytelling: Fictionality, Post-Factuality, and the Filmic Voice in Joshua Oppenheimer’s Documentary The Act of Killing (2012)
Affiliation:
1. Justus Liebig University Giessen
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Based on a rhetorical-narratological analysis of Joshua Oppenheimer’s film The Act of Killing (2012), this article identifies a specific use of the filmic voice which it defines as ‘laissez-faire storytelling.’ The laissez-faire voice is a rhetorical stance that serves documentary filmmakers to reconfigure their narrative position toward actors who espouse a ‘post-factual’ worldview. Directors who employ this stance strategically grant their actors a considerable amount of freedom in the making of the documentary. Ultimately, however, their technique exposes a problematic rhetoric in which the borderline between fictionality and non-fictionality is obliterated. The article concludes that the laissez-faire documentary resonates strongly with current attempts in both theory and art to restabilize the precarious boundaries between fictionality and non-fictionality—a reorientation that is decidedly ‘post-postmodernist.’
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Reference46 articles.
1. “The Act of Killing Trailer—Official Trailer.”
YouTube
, uploaded by Dogwoof, 12June2013, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3FcB1UZHlg. Accessed 19 Jan. 2023.
2. “The Act of Killing: An Interview with Joshua Oppenheimer.”;Cinéaste,2013
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