Understanding the act of listening in literal and metaphorical senses, The Documentary Audit consolidates Pooja Rangans position as a leading scholar of documentary media. Rangan moves across a diverse array of historical and contemporary materials to elaborate a new conceptual vocabularyone that unsettles received ideas, asks hard questions concerning documentarys political aspirations, and is sure to prove influential. -- Erika Balsom, reader in film and media studies, Kings College London Listening with care to how voices sound and paying close attention to how they are produced have preoccupied me for the last twenty-five yearsbut on every page of The Documentary Audit there is a light-bulb moment where I am shocked, outragedand reinvigorated. Rangan is the kind of intellectual and activist who will bring voice, sound, and documentary studies into the critical space Trinh T. Minh-ha has long urged us to hear. -- Nina Sun Eidsheim, author of The Race of Sound: Listening, Timbre, and Vocality in African American Music The Documentary Audit challenges readers in the best possible way to approach documentary with care, attentive to its competing claims and to the industry forces that contain and constrain it. In this impressive work, Rangan proposes that with a deeper engagement and the practice of otherwise listening," documentary can ultimately succeed in modeling new listening practices that might just begin to reach the radical proposition of documentary to lead to real change. But first we must all learn how to listen better. -- Alisa Lebow, creator of Filming Revolution Pooja Rangans The Documentary Audit marks an exciting and essential contribution to documentary scholarship. Rather than focusing on what documentaries show, Rangan investigates how they teach us to listen, revealing the often unacknowledged power dynamics at work in documentary's auditory realm. Drawing on case studies ranging from GPO film units of the 1930s though contemporary forensic investigations, Rangan introduces the concept of "the documentary audit" - which conditions documentary listening , distributes attentional resources, and shapes political relationships. Through lucid and engaging analyses, Rangan illuminates how conventional documentary listening practices have been complicit in linguistic profiling, ableist exclusion, and carceral logics. Meticulously researched and theoretically sophisticated without sacrificing clarity, The Documentary Audit makes an essential contribution to documentary studies, sound studies, and media ethics. It will be an indispensable resource for scholars, media makers, and anyone concerned with the politics of representation and the ethical responsibilities of documentary. And to top it off, its a genuine pleasure to read. -- Leshu Torchin, Department of Film Studies, University of St Andrews