Document details

Documenting Syria: Film-Making, Video Activism and Revolution

London et al.: Tauris (2019), xiv, 321 pp.

Contains illustrations, bibliogr. pp. 291-301, index, film index pp. 318-321

Series: Library of Modern Middle East Studies

ISBN 978-1-83860-434-9 (pbk); 978-1-78831-617-0 (pdf)

"Since the 1970s, Syrian cinema masters played a defining role in avant-garde filmmaking and political dissent against authoritarianism. After the outbreak of violence in 2011, an estimated 500,000 video clips were uploaded making it one of the first YouTubed revolutions in history. This book is the first history of documentary filmmaking in Syria. Based on extensive media ethnography and in-depth interviews with Syrian filmmakers in exile, the book offers an archival analysis of the documentary work by masters of Syrian cinema, such as Nabil Maleh, Ossama Mohammed, Mohammed Malas, Hala Al Abdallah, Hanna Ward, Ali Atassi and Omar Amiralay. Joshka Wessels traces how the works of these filmmakers became iconic for a new generation of filmmakers at the beginning of the 21st century and maps the radical change in the documentary landscape after the revolution of 2011. Special attention is paid to the late Syrian filmmaker and pro-democracy activist, Bassel Shehadeh, and the video-resistance from Aleppo and Raqqa against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad and the Islamic State." (Publisher description)
Introduction, 1
Dissident art and Arab cinema, 9
I. DOCUMENTARY FILM-MAKING IN SYRIA, 19
1 Masters of Syrian documentary, 23
2 Inspired by the masters, a new generation, 89
3 Documentaries for social change, the case of Bassel Shehadeh, 143
II. EYEWITNESSES OF A REVOLUTION, 167
4 Syrian emergency cinema and YouTube, 173
5 The view from below: Video activism from the North, 193
6 Politics of the image: Relations with international media, 211
7 To tell the world! Evidencing war crimes and virtual reality, 231
Epilogue, 251