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[Commlist] New book: "True Event Adaptation: Scripting Real Lives,"
Mon Feb 25 14:48:21 GMT 2019
New book announcement:
*/TRUE EVENT ADAPTATION: SCRIPTING REAL LIVES /*
edited by Davinia Thornley (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018)
https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319973210#aboutBook
<https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319973210#reviews>
These essays all—in various ways—address the relationship between
adaptation, “true events,” and cultural memory. They ask (and frequently
answer) the question: how do we script stories about real events that
are often still fresh in our memories and may involve living people?
/True Event Adaptation: Scripting Real Lives/ contains essays from
scholars committed to interrogating historical and current hard-hitting
events, traumas, and truths through various media. Each essay goes
beyond general discussion of adaptation and media to engage with the
specifics of adapting true life events—addressing pertinent and
controversial questions around scriptwriting, representation, ethics,
memory, forms of history, and methodological interventions. Written for
readers interested in how memory works on culture as well as
screenwriting choices, the collection offers new perspectives on
historical media and commercial media that is currently being produced,
as well as on media created by the book’s contributors themselves.
*REVIEW
*
**
“Why should fictional adaptations get all the headlines? Davinia
Thornley’s contributors revisit a set of ten real-life subjects and
situations, from female circumcision in Egypt to the 2015 terrorist
attacks in Paris, examining their adaptation in films from /The Quiet
American /to /Zero Dark Thirty. /These essays complicate and challenge
traditional binaries between genre and realism, creating and
interpreting, fictional and nonfictional films. Individually and
collectively, they make a persuasive case for the importance of
adaptation, and the power of adaptation studies, in helping us make
sense of contemporary reality.”
Thomas Leitch, University of Delaware, USA
*CONTENTS*
1. Introduction—Scripting Real Lives
Davinia Thornley
2. The Study of Historical Films as Adaptation:
Some Critical Reflections
Patrick Cattrysse //
3. Waiting for the Great Swell of ‘74:
John Milius and Autobiographical Self-projection in /Big Wednesday/
Alfio Leotta
4. Making Robert Sarkies’ Film /Out of the Blue/:
Adaptation & Indigenization in Aotearoa New Zealand
Davinia Thornley
5. When the Truth becomes Too Hard to Tell:
Jocylene Saab & /Dunia/ (2005)
Margaret McVeigh
6. Making It “Real”/“Reel”:
Truth, Trauma, and American Exceptionalism in /Zero Dark Thirty/
Jennifer L. Gauthier
7. (The Facts before) The Fiction before the Facts:
/Suburra/ from Novel (to Trial) to Feature to TV Serial
Paolo Russo
8. Reaching Young Audiences through Research:
Using the NABC Method to Create the Norwegian Web Teenage Drama
/SKAM/Shame/
Eva Novrup Redvall
9. An Adaptation of Life:
Ethnographically-grounded Fiction as a Method of Inquiry into
Personal Accounts of Traumatic Events
Ester T. Roura
10. Writing the Screenplay for the History Film:
A Case Study Featuring the Historical Figure, C.Y. O’Connor
Nadia Meneghello
***ABOUT THE EDITOR*
*Davinia Thornley* is Senior Lecturer in Media, Film, and
Communication at the University of Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand. She
led the 2017 Screenwriting Research Network international
conference, from which the majority of these essays are drawn, and
is the author of /Cinema, Cross-Cultural Collaboration, and
Criticism: Filming on an Uneven Field/ (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
Her current research centers on representations of the childfree
choice in various academic disciplines.
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