The Ph.D. Program in History

at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York

Uncategorized

22-24 January: 3-Day Intensive on Documentary Film-making and Visual Storytelling for Researchers

This intensive three-day workshop, facilitated by Dr. Rachel Eskin Fisher, will help you explore the potential of documentary storytelling for sharing your work with the world. Making a documentary film is not simply a matter of adding pictures to your words. Rather, it requires a visual way of thinking that most academics are not accustomed to, and a storytelling structure that differs from academic persuasion in essential ways. Spend some time immersed in another way of thinking and communicating that opens new opportunities for sharing your work. Participants will emerge from the workshop with a rough draft of a documentary pitch and a broad overview of the documentary film-making process.

Participants will:

  • Experience a mindset shift from “telling” to “showing”
  • Explore the storytelling opportunities in your subject matter
  • Get an introductory step-by-step overview of how to make a documentary film
  • Practice a writing style suited to film pitches

The workshop will consist of hands-on exercises, presentations by Dr. Fisher (including film clips), group discussion, and feedback from Dr. Fisher and from peers.

Rachel Eskin Fisher is the co-producer and co-director of the documentary film Joachim Prinz: I Shall Not Be Silent. She also co-produced Remembering Oswiecim, a short film that was featured at the Auschwitz Jewish Center in Poland, and she has produced several trailers. She has written four screenplays, two of which have been optioned. She holds a PhD in Religious Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Registration is capped at 15 people, so sign up at this link.

Sponsored by the PublicsLab