Sunday, April 18, 2021

Creative Critical Reflection

Creative Critical Reflection

For the past 8 weeks, I have worked on my AICE Media Studies A Level project, "________ American", with my partner, Colin. We completed the documentary package, with the topic about the immigrant experience, and how people learn their cultural heritage, when not originating from its original location. When expressing people’s cultural identities, we focused the documentary on our interviewees, to get unique perspectives on their identity.

To achieve this topic and tone, we conducted some genre research. In doing so, I understood that documentaries are educational, contain interviews, and graphics. Some common genre conventions are narrator voice overs, handheld cameras, and spoken event reenactments. I researched the documentaries “Explained” and “Headspace: Guide to Meditation” and understood the importance of colorful graphics and chronological ordering to keep the documentary engaging and comprehendible. In our documentary, we follow all these genre conventions, but not in a traditional way. Due to COVID-19, we could not record these interviews in person, and used video chat to record the interviews. Even though we did not use a handheld camera, a computer camera worked well to display and capture our interviewees verbiage. Also, we followed the convention of reenacting events, by layering stop motion scenes over interviewees responses. We thought it is an engaging choice and create another layer of depth to the production. In our stop motion scenes, we used chess pieces to represent people. The interviewees parents were the king and queen, and the child was the pawn, based on size differences. This choice helped represent a family and their relationship, based on the direction they move in the frame.

Early in the process, we decided our target audience to be Generation Z. In my post “Genre and Target Audience” and “Week 3: Meeting: Excerpt Structure and Representation”, we chose this target audience because of the relatability our topic has to those people. Generation Z is known as the most multi- cultural generation to date, meaning learning and establishing cultural identity Is a familiar experience. This fact guided our choice of interviewees, which were all Generation Z people that originated from 5 major continents around the world. We wanted a representative body of people because each ethnicity has a distinct experience of immigrating to America. Historically, immigrates who came to America first have a more pronounced collective identity in the U.S, than immigrants later. Therefore, we chose interviewees, to understand varied immigration experiences their parents, or the interviewees had. That experience can dictate how people learn culture, `which is a theme Colin and I wanted to cover. In the blog post, “Interviewee Questions”, we discuss how our selection of questions highlight themes of assimilation, Americanization, and overall self-development. These topics are related to the Generation Z audience because they are still developing their identity and individuality. Additionally, the structure of our documentary considers ours target audiences’ behaviors. Because Generation Z has a shorter attention span than other generations of viewers, we made sure to edit sections shorter in the documentary. In my blog post “What we did today”, I highlight the target audiences’ behaviors, that dictated our structure of the series, specifically Episode 1, covering history of immigration.  

With our entire production, we wanted to create a tone that was positive and upbeat, but serious at the same time. This is because the stories told by our interviewees are very candid and personal, and we wanted to treat their stories with the utmost respect. Therefore, we decided the documentaries concept as e a scrapbook or storybook look and feel. With our documentary, we were visually chronicling the experience of immigration, that evolved our 5 interviewees personal and cultural identity. To create this aesthetic, we used cursive writing, beige backgrounds, and a varied graphics. In our documentary, we used the beige background and cursive writing for our title cards, and incorporated graphics in our history section, as well as introducing our interviewees. Also, we used name cards to define our interviewees, that mimicked the style of a documentary. In our social media, we used the beige background and cursive writing in most of our posts, with a table of contents, to simulate a scrapbooks aesthetic. The posts are graphic intensive, to attract our intended Generation Z audience. In all honesty, we came up with the concept for the social media before the documentary and attempted to incorporate as many scrapbook elements in our documentary as possible. It was not what we intended to do but we are satisfied with the components.

In our production, we used our scrapbook components to complement the heartfelt and candid stories of our interviewees. The interviewees in our documentary were an explicit example of representation, to display as many experiences of cultural and identity as possible. Otherwise, the experience would not be depicted accurately. With our interviewees, they represent ethnicities from 5 major continents around the world: American, Hispanic, African, European, and Indian. This was an explicit choice, and helped convey similar and conflicting opinions, on how to develop a dual cultural identity. These social groups provide their unique opinion about cultural identity, based on when most of those people immigrated to the United States first. For example, I covered in my blog “History of Immigration to America”, I covered that the Irish came to the United States first. Therefore, they would have a more pronounced culture in America, due to the extent they have been present in the country. We explored ideas of Americanization and cultural homogenization, that presented social issues to our interviewees.

In the end, I felt that the components worked well together, and made the project engaging. We could have added more engaging elements, such as music or specific framing of shots. Though, we were not able to attempt those correctly, and decided to stick to what we had. Also, our documentary and component work to create branding, though it could have been stronger. In the end, I did the best I could, and cannot wait to see what people think of our work.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Creative Critical Reflection

Creative Critical Reflection For the past 8 weeks, I have worked on my AICE Media Studies A Level project, "________ American", wi...