Wondering, Lingering and Priming are three terms associated with noticing, and can be used to increase intentional noticing, no matter what your profession. In the reading “Ghostly Forms and Forest Histories” by Andrew Mathews, Mathews suggests that by using these three actions, to linger, to wonder and to prime oneself, a person can notice and comprehend their world around them to a fuller extent. Furthermore, he talks about how a persons profession can further aid them in noticing and understanding.
Mathews, who has studied in the fields of forestry and anthropology, took a journey through the forests of Italy. He writes that we was “walking, looking and wondering” through these chestnut forest ruins, being primed for whatever he faced and lingering on the special parts of his journey. He used these three tactics to notice as much as he could during his trip, and while it may not be as intense as Mathews, we as media practitioners can follow these same rules of wondering, lingering and noticing within our profession to enhance our films.
As discussed in class, these three strategies of noticing can aid in the creation of recipes for production. Taking the time to set out and linger on a location, just to observe, allows that person to notice and pick up on aspects of the place that weren’t instantly recognisable. For example, a person setting out to record audio on location wonders what they might pick up, priming themselves to hear certain sounds. Listening back to that recording intently allows the creator to pick up on unique sounds and events within a space that they did not expect. This will give the person an advantage in knowing what they want to film, based on what stands out within the recording and what they know will be interesting and engaging, because of their media experience.
Mathews, Andrew S. “Ghostly Forms and Forest Histories.” Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts of the Anthropocene, edited by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing et al., University of Minnesota Press, 2017, pp. 145–56