Enabling polyvocality in interactive documentaries through 'structural participation'

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Abstract

Recent innovations in online, social and interactive media have led to the emergence of new forms of documentary, such as interactive documentaries ('i-Docs'), with qualities that lend themselves to more open and inclusive production structures. Still, little is known about the experience of making and/or participating-in these kinds of documentary. Our two-year in-the-wild study engaged a large community-of-interest in the production of an i-Doc to explore the ethically-desirable yet challenging aim of enabling multiple subjects to have agency and control over their representation in a documentary. Our study reveals insights into the experiences of participating in an i-Doc and highlights key sociotechnical challenges. We argue that new sociotechnical infrastructure is needed, that frames both 'executory' and 'structural' forms of participation as symbiotic elements of a co-design process.

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Green, D. P., Bowen, S., Hook, J., & Wright, P. (2017). Enabling polyvocality in interactive documentaries through “structural participation.” In Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - Proceedings (Vol. 2017-May, pp. 6317–6329). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3025453.3025606

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