Documentary Researcher

Role

Gathers, checks, organizes, and contextualizes factual material for nonfiction or research-based projects.

Description

A Documentary Researcher gathers, checks, organizes, and contextualizes factual material for a project. This may include interviews, archives, timelines, people, places, events, images, footage, documents, or historical background.

In immersive media, documentary research may support interactive documentaries, historical reconstructions, personal testimony, public memory, cultural heritage, or nonfiction experiences. The role helps the work remain accurate, grounded, and respectful of the people or events it represents.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within writing, narrative, and dramaturgy, the Documentary Researcher provides the factual and contextual basis for narrative framing, script development, world construction, ethics review, and production decisions. The role is especially important when immersive presence could intensify claims of truth, memory, or testimony.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within research practice, the Documentary Researcher connects factual material to creative development. They help the team understand what is known, what is uncertain, what needs verification, and what permissions or sensitivities may be involved.

Scope Note

Includes archive research, subject research, fact-checking, interview preparation, chronology, source tracking, rights context, cultural/historical background, evidence organization, and research notes for writers, directors, producers, or designers.

Boundary Note

Distinct from documentary directing, producing, or writing. The researcher may shape story possibilities, but the primary responsibility is knowledge, evidence, context, and factual reliability.

Collaboration Note

Commonly collaborates with writers, directors, producers, dramaturgs, editors, subject-matter experts, legal/rights advisors, community consultants, and archive teams.

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