The People We Watch
Documentary Contributors and What Their Experiences Tell Us About the Cultural Industries
Abstract
The People We Watch explores the politics of contemporary media production from the point of view of the ordinary people it represents.
Based upon a series of in-depth interviews and the author’s own professional experience of working in the television industry, this book examines how documentary contributors feel about participating in the media and the ways they are portrayed, considering how their experiences take shape within the structural context of the cultural industries.
This insightful text will interest scholars, students, and researchers in media and communication, sociology of the media, documentary studies, and film studies, as well as those studying the cultural industries, media production, creative labour, and cultural policy.
Keywords
Documentary;TV;Fly-on-the-wall;Participation;Documentary contributors;Casting;Media ethics;Cultural labour;Cultural labor;Working practices;Cultural industries;Creative industries;CapitalismDOI
10.4324/9781003568971ISBN
9781003568971, 9781040328682, 9781032941035, 9781040328675Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://0-taylorandfrancis-com.catalogue.libraries.london.ac.uk/Publication date and place
2025Grantor
Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Studies in Media and Cultural Industries,Classification
Media studies: TV and society
Documentary films
Film, TV and Radio industries
History
Popular culture
Sociology: work and labour