'This is an excellent study of issues of space and place in recent French documentary, offering rich and evocative readings of individual films and detailed engagement with the material specificities of documentary production in France. It will be of major interest to researchers and students.'
Laura McMahon, Cambridge
'
Vivre Ici marks a major advance in thinking about contemporary documentary in France and about documentary in general. It does this by mobilizing aesthetic, cultural, and institutional approaches.'
Steven Ungar, University of Iowa
'Vivre Ici represents a useful curation of French documentary and a worthy addition to an expanding subfield of Film Studies that will be of much interest to film scholars, researchers, and students of French documentary.'
Matthew Gibson,
Modern Language Review'One of the impressive strengths of Levine's study is the further comparative aesthetic and ethical questioning the analysis triggers. Her attention to the extra-textual context surrounding each film, with a focus on audience response, combined with her meticulous attention to the multisensory experience of film space, brilliantly underlines the impossibility of separating the social and political role (and responsibility) of documentary film, from its equally important status as an art form that affects and moves the spectator in more ways than one...Scholars and students of French history, cinema and cultural studies, and of documentary film studies more generally, will find the book an inspiring and informative pedagogical resource to draw on.'
Albertine Fox, H-France Review
'Alison J. Murray Levine's latest book
Vivre Ici is a refreshing, accessible read that invites readers to appreciate the unique ability documentary, and more specifically French documentary, has to connect us to the world around us.'
Audrey Evrard,
Modern & Contemporary France'The balance between theory and its application in Levine's book makes for a very accessible and pleasing read [...] It will be of appeal to academics and students alike, particularly those working in French studies, and film and media studies.'
Oliver Brett,
French History'Levine's book fills in an important gap in French film studies in that it moves away from the topic of a small set of films to focus on what matters the most-that documentaries can transmit a sensual experience to the audience. Levine examines films produced over the last twenty years in metropolitan France. However, her analysis can apply to general documentaries, past or future, French or not.'
Martine Guyot-Bender,
French ReviewReviews 'This monograph is pertinent for scholars of film or contemporary French history. Furthermore, its readability lends it to being a useful addition to bibliographies for film and culture studies courses as well as an enjoyable book for cinephiles or Francophiles outside of academia.'
Tessa Ashlin Nunn,
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature