Abstract
This chapter explores ideas of authenticity in relation to autobiographical stop-motion animation, using Georgia Christindis’ concept of the “authenticity effect”, Steven Lipkin’s work on “warranting strategies” and Elizabeth Bruss’ three autobiographical values. These ideas are used to analyse two short film: Karen Watson’s Daddy’s Little Bit of Dresden China (1988) and Timothy Mercier’s Model Childhood (2018). The chapter concludes that both these short films use stop-motion animation with a handmade, homemade quality, in combination with other “authenticity effects” and warranting strategies to evoke a sense of authenticity. Both films use form and technique to interrogate not only the personal history of the filmmaker but also the very nature of remembering and representing the past.
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Films
Daddy’s Little Bit of Dresden China. Private Vimeo link. Directed by Watson, Karen (West Surrey College of Art and Design, 1988).
Model Childhood. Private Vimeo link. Directed by Mercier, Timothy (Department of Media Arts: Royal Holloway University of London, 2018).
Park, Nick. 2012. Interviewed in Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan. DVD. Directed by Penso, Gilles (Arrow Films, 2012).
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MacKinnon, C. (2019). Autobiography and Authenticity in Stop-Motion Animation. In: Ruddell, C., Ward, P. (eds) The Crafty Animator. Palgrave Animation. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13943-8_5
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