Goran Gocić

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Goran Gocić is a Serbian freelance journalist,[1] editor, author and filmmaker, whose work has been published or broadcast by many media organizations worldwide. Gocic is the winner of the NIN Prize, a prestigious Serbian literary award for 2013.

Books

  • Pornocratia: A Cultural History of Sex in the Media (2008/2009), a monograph on the ascent of pornography in the West, is his largest and most ambitious project so far.
  • Zelimir Zilnik: Above the Red Dust (2003) (chapter)
  • Notes from the Underground: The Cinema of Emir Kusturica (2001/2006)[1]
  • Degraded Capability: Media and the Kosovo Crisis (2000) (chapter)
  • Andy Warhol and Strategies of Pop (1997)
  • Tai (2013)

Cinematography

Ever since Gocić worked as an undercover reporter (in style of Gunter Walraff’s Ganz Unten) in the documentary Bloody Foreigners (2001) for the UK Channel 4 series Dispatches, he has become a passionate champion of the DV revolution. With A M. Sc. in Media and Communications (LSE, 1999), he is presently running Force Majeure, the production company for feature documentaries Balkan Diaries: Bulgaria, on Orthodox priests facing transitional turmoil and Today a Visa, Tomorrow the World on Serbian troubles with visas.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 (13 August 2007). Finding roots in a reel Balkan village, Los Angeles Times" ("Goran Gocic a Serbian film critic who has written a biography of Kusturica ...")
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.