Watching Film with One’s Body

Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 4 (2):111-120 (2020)
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Abstract

Film viewers make sense of films first of all at a precognitive level, triggered by their bodi­ly responses. The key notion here is movement: the movements of screen characters, the movements simulated by the viewers who perceive these characters, and the camera move­ments that mediate between the two. This review essay evaluates two monographs: Maarten Coëgnarts’ Embodied Cinema, which expands conceptual metaphor theo­ry to account for film’s unique affordances to communicate embodied meaning; and Vit­torio Gallese's and Michele Guerra’s The Empathic Screen, which buttresses embod­ied simulation by film viewers experimentally by demonstrating the workings of “mirror neurons.” The review ends by discussing how these two books tie in with other develop­ments in the study of gene-culture coevolution.

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Embodied cognition and cinema.Maarten Coëgnarts & Peter Kravanja (eds.) - 2015 - Leuven: Leuven University Press.
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Embodying movies: Embodied simulation and film studies.Vittorio Gallese & Michele Guerra - 2012 - Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image 3:183-210.

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