English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Blend of documentary +‎ fiction.

Noun

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docufiction (countable and uncountable, plural docufictions)

  1. (film) A cinematographic combination of documentary and fiction.
    Coordinate term: docudrama
    • 1988, Welch D. Everman, Who Says This?: The Authority of the Author, the Discourse, and the Reader, SIU Press, →ISBN, page 3:
      The Novel as Document: The "Docufiction" of Norman Mailer, Jay Cantor, and Jack Kerouac
      WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO SAY that a novel-a work of fiction is based on the life of a real person, on events that really happened in the world []
    • 2019, Jeroen Gerrits, chapter 4, in Cinematic Skepticism: Across Digital and Global Turns, SUNY Press, →ISBN, page 73:
      Although not a new phenomenon as such, the genre of the docufiction film has grown spectacularly since the global and digital turns in the 1990s. Retrospectively attributed to the practices of such diverse filmmakers as Robert Flaherty, Jean Rouch, or Abbas Kiarostami, the genre, as the name suggests, applies to hybrid films that cross the traditional division of films between fiction and documentary. [] The docufiction genre generally, and Werner Herzog's recent films in particular, form crystals of a special kind.
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See also

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French

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French Wikipedia has an article on:
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Pronunciation

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  • Audio:(file)

Noun

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docufiction f (plural docufictions)

  1. docudrama (drama that combines elements of documentary and drama)