Results for 'cinema narrative'

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  1. Visual pleasure and narrative cinema.Laura Mulvey - 2010 - In Marc Furstenau (ed.), The film theory reader: debates and arguments. New York: Routledge.
  2.  10
    Cinema of choice: optional thinking and narrative movies.Nitzan S. Ben-Shaul - 2012 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    Introduction -- Closed mindedness in movies -- Failed alternatives to optional thinking -- Optional thinking in movies -- Conclusion.
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  3.  22
    Early Cinema: Space-Frame-Narrative.Donald Crafton, Thomas Elsaesser & Adam Barker - 1992 - Substance 21 (2):119.
  4.  77
    Towards Another '–Image': Deleuze, Narrative Time and Popular Indian Cinema.David Martin-Jones - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (1):25-48.
    Popular Indian cinema provides a test case for examining the limitations of Gilles Deleuze's categories of movement-image and time-image. Due to the context-specific aesthetic and cultural traditions that inform popular Indian cinema, although it appears at times to be both movement- and time-image, it actually creates a different type of image. Analysis of Toofani Tarzan (1936) and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) demonstrates how, alternating between a movement of world typical of the time-image, and a sensory-motor movement of (...)
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  5.  21
    Global Trauma and Narrative Cinema.Neil Narine - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (4):119-145.
    This article examines how the global traumas of resource-driven conflicts and acts of terrorism are mapped in 21st-century US and UK narrative cinema, and suggests that guilt, elicited in the implied Western viewer, is displaced in the films onto images of Western women. Revisiting Mulvey’s influential theory of ‘visual pleasure’ through the ‘male gaze’, this article analyses the films Traffic, a depiction of US complicity with global drug cartels, Babel, the story of a global media frenzy surrounding American (...)
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  6. Deceptive Retrospective Narrative Strategy and Synchronistic Prerequisite: Case Study on The Design of Impossible Puzzles.Yu Yang - 2023 - Cinej Cinema Journal 11 (1):258-288.
    The deceptive clues in the impossible puzzle film confirm the viewer’s internal expectations and allow retrospective attributing. In the film, a transcendental object negates an internal expectation, causing a retrospective blockage. Retrospectivity does not stop there; the transcendental object reinterpreting deceptive clues in the associative area leads to repeated attribution. This article consists of three parts. First, it discusses impossible puzzle films in the context of complex narrative classification. The following section introduces the Jungian concept of synchronicity and illustrates (...)
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  7. Music in narrative film. On motion and stasis : Photography, "moving pictures," music / David Neumeyer, Laura Neumeyer ; the topos of "evil medieval" in american horror film music / James deaville ; la leggenda Del pianista sull'oceano : Narration, music, and cinema / Rosa Stella cassotti ; music in Aki kaurismäki's film the match factory girl / Erkki pekkilä ; it's a little bit funny : Moulin rouge's sparkling postmodern critique.Susan Ingram - 2006 - In Erkki Pekkilä, David Neumeyer & Richard Littlefield (eds.), Music, Meaning and Media. University of Helsinki.
  8.  23
    Power and Paranoia: History, Narrative and the American Cinema, 1940-1950.Dana Benelli & Dana Polan - 1988 - Substance 17 (3):70.
  9.  27
    Chasing Film Narrative: Repetition, Recursion, and the Body in Early Cinema.Jonathan Auerbach - 2000 - Critical Inquiry 26 (4):798-820.
  10.  5
    Tacitus and cinema - (p.) Waddell tacitean visual narrative. Pp. XII + 240, ills. London and new York: Bloomsbury academic, 2020. Cased, £85, us$115. Isbn: 978-1-350-09700-1. [REVIEW]James McNamara - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (2):420-422.
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  11.  14
    Archetypes and female identity through audiovisual narrative in Hitchcock's cinema: empowerment and submission in_ Spellbound _and Vertigo.Josep Prósper Ribes & Francisca Ramón Fernández - 2023 - Alpha (Osorno) 57:30-45.
    Resumen La figura femenina en el arte cinematográfico ha sido mostrada mediante arquetipos y cumpliendo distintas funciones. Nos proponemos en este estudio analizar los personajes femeninos por medio de la narrativa audiovisual en dos películas emblemáticas de la cinematografía de Hitchcock: Recuerda y Vértigo, en las que la mujer se contempla como empoderada, pero también sometida, llegando a una negación de su propia identidad. Consideramos que la forma del tratamiento de la mujer en el cine de dicha época radica en (...)
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  12.  17
    Peirce’s diagrammatic reasoning and the cinema: Image, diagram, and narrative in The Shape of Water.Paul Cobley & Yunhee Lee - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (236-237):29-46.
    This article aims to examine the relationship between image and narrative by means of Peirce’s first trichotomy of qualisign-sinsign-legisign or, for the purposes of the current argument, image-diagram-metaphor. It is argued that narrative, as an extended metaphor, can be examined in three modes: in the image; schematically, in the imagination; and allegorically or in a thought experiment, through hypothetic interpretation. The article outlines two kinds of diagrammatic reasoning emphasized by Peirce: corollarial deduction in which the image is ‘literally (...)
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  13.  6
    Traversing the fantasy: the dialectic of desire / fantasy and the ethics of narrative cinema.Sandra Meiri - 2019 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic. Edited by Odeya Kohen Raz.
    Offers a refreshing take on the relevance of psychoanalytic theory for the analysis of films and cinema.
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  14. Afterthoughts on "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" inspired by King Vidor's Duel in the Sun (1946).Laura Mulvey - 1993 - In Antony Easthope (ed.), Contemporary film theory. New York: Longman. pp. 125-34.
  15. Reviews : John Tulloch, Australian Cinema: Industry, Narrative and Meaning (George Allen & Unwin, Sydney 1982). [REVIEW]Greg Mundy - 1982 - Thesis Eleven 5 (1):332-335.
  16. Afterthoughts on "visual pleasure and narrative cinema".Laura Mulvey - 2010 - In Marc Furstenau (ed.), The film theory reader: debates and arguments. New York: Routledge.
     
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  17.  11
    Politics of vision: Subjects and urban scenarios in narrative cinema.A. De Pascalis Ilaria - 2017 - Latest Issue of Empedocles European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 8 (1):3-6.
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  18.  24
    Cinéma et imaginaire social en venant de Ricœur.Samuel Lelièvre - 2014 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 5 (2):81-104.
    Résumé Le cinéma peut être considéré comme un exemple particulièrement pertinent et instructif d’un discours et d’une pratique rapportables à chacun des trois grands domaines de l’imagination selon Ricœur – discours, articulation entre un niveau théorique et un niveau pratique, et imaginaire social. Tout en ayant pour objectif de se concentrer sur ce dernier niveau, une approche plus complète des notions de récit filmique et d’imaginaire social en venant de Ricœur requiert de traverser de nouveau les deux autres niveaux. Il (...)
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  19.  14
    David Martin-Jones (2006) Deleuze, Cinema and National Identity: Narrative Time in National Contexts.Will Higbee - 2009 - Film-Philosophy 13 (1):156-157.
  20.  9
    Cinema, memory, modernity: the representation of memory from the art film to transnational cinema.Russell James Angus Kilbourn - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    Introduction : cinema, memory, modernity: the return of memory as film -- No escape from time : memory and redemption in the international postwar art film -- The "crisis" of memory : "traumatic identity" in the contemporary memory film -- "Global memory" : cinema as lingua franca and the commodification of the image -- The eye of history : memory, surveillance and ethicality in the contemporary art film -- "Prosthetic memory" and transnational cinema : globalized identity and (...)
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  21.  5
    Cinema and Sacrifice.Costica Bradatan & Camil Ungureanu (eds.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    Cinema has a long history of engaging with the theme of sacrifice. Given its capacity to stimulate the imagination and resonate across a wide spectrum of human experiences, sacrifice has always attracted filmmakers. It is on screen that the new grand narratives are sketched, the new myths rehearsed, and the old ones recycled. Sacrifice can provide stories of loss and mourning, betrayal and redemption, death and renewal, destruction and re-creation, apocalypses and the birth of new worlds. The contributors to (...)
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  22.  5
    Cinema: the construction of time.Elena Pogorelskaya & Leonid Chernov - 2023 - Sotsium I Vlast 4 (98):69-83.
    Introduction. The technical art of cinematography is traditionally regarded as a synthetic unity of scientific and technological progress and creativity. The possibility of unlimited copying of movie plots makes it possible to extend the authority of cinema to broad areas of public attention and forms a mass man. At the same time, the fact that cinema is, first of all, an experiment with time, organized by technical means, remains behind the scenes. The purpose of the study. If the (...)
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  23.  33
    Imagining Cinema: ‘Cinempathy’ and the Embodied Imagination.Robert Sinnerbrink - 2020 - Paragraph 43 (3):281-297.
    Imagination has been the focus of much philosophical inquiry in recent decades. Although it plays an essential role in linking emotional engagement with ethical experience, imagination has received comparatively little attention in film-philosophy. In this article, I argue that imagination plays an essential role in linking emotional engagement with moral-ethical experience. Drawing on phenomenological, cognitive and aesthetic perspectives, I focus on perceptual imagining and suggest that an account of embodied cinematic imagination — encompassing both perceptual/sensory and propositional/cognitive imagining — is (...)
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  24. European Cinema and Continental Philosophy: Film as Thought Experiment, by Thomas Elsaesser. [REVIEW]Ekin Erkan - 2019 - Alphaville 18:232–238.
    Thomas Elsaesser’s recent scholarship has examined the “mind-game film”, a phenomenon in Hollywood that is broadly characterised by multi-platform storytelling, paratextual narrative feedback loops, nonlinear storytelling, and unreliable character perspectives. While “mind-game” or “puzzle” films have become a contentious subject amongst post-cinema scholars concerned with Hollywood storytelling, what is to be said of contemporary European independent cinema? Elsaesser’s timely publication, European Cinema and Continental Philosophy, examines an amalgam of politically inclined European auteurs to resolve this query. (...)
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  25.  5
    O cinema feminino como um retrato de si: o enquadramento feminino em 'Retrato de uma jovem em chamas'.Ana Paula Penkala & Isadora Ebersol - 2020 - Revista Philia Filosofia, Literatura e Arte 2 (2):2-36.
    Retrato de uma jovem em chamas, filme de Céline Sciamma, propõe a discussão sobre o “olhar feminino”, tanto na pintura quanto no cinema. O artigo parte da perspectiva dos Estudos Feministas e busca correlações entre o filme e o cânone da literatura, da pintura e do cinema e o sistema patriarcal que lhes dá suporte. Observa como esse cânone instrumentaliza um culto à passividade feminina e sua inscrição enquanto objeto na História, estetizando “a mulher morta” como índice dessa (...)
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  26.  9
    Narrative and narration: analyzing cinematic storytelling.Warren Buckland - 2020 - New York: Wallflower.
    From mainstream blockbusters to art house cinema, narrative and narration are the driving forces that organize a film. Yet attempts to explain these forces are often mired in notoriously complex terminology and dense theory. Warren Buckland provides a clear and accessible introduction that explains how narrative and narration work using straightforward language. Narrative and Narration distills the basic components of cinematic storytelling into a set of core concepts: narrative structure, processes of narration, and narrative (...)
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  27.  7
    The intervals of cinema.Jacques Rancière - 2014 - New York: Verso. Edited by John Howe.
    Cinema, like language, can be said to exist as a system of differences. In his latest book, acclaimed philosopher Jacques Rancière looks at cinematic art in comparison to its corollary forms in literature and theatre. From literature, he argues, cinema takes its narrative conventions, while at the same time effacing literature’s images and philosophy; and film rejects theatre, while also fulfilling theatre’s dream. Built on these contradictions, the cinema is the real, material space in which one (...)
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  28.  9
    Book Review: The Violent Woman: Femininity, Narrative, and Violence in Contemporary American Cinema; Wonder Women: Feminisms and Superheroes. [REVIEW]Neal King - 2006 - Gender and Society 20 (3):422-424.
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  29.  1
    Cinema: concept & practice.Edward Dmytryk - 1988 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. Edited by Joe McElhaney.
    In this unique study of the process of filmmaking, director Edward Dmytryk blends abstract film theory and the practical realities of feature film production to provide an artful and elegant analysis of the conceptual foundations of filmmaking and film studies. Dmytryk explores the technical principles underlying the craft of filmmaking and how their use is effective in developing the viewer's involvement in the cinematic narrative. Originally published in 1988, this reissue of Dmytryk's classic book includes a new critical introduction (...)
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  30.  10
    Enacting the worlds of cinema.Steffen Hven - 2022 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Enacting the World of Cinema offers a substantial reconfiguration of the textual roots of modern film narratology. By giving sustained attention to cinema's material-affective modes of communicating its stories and embedding its audience in atmospheric, kinetic, and multisensorial worlds, this book maintains that film narratives are less representations than they are enactments; brought forth through the interactions of the felt body and the film material. The book defends this enactive and media-anthropological thesis by reworking a series of established (...)
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  31.  19
    Layered Encounters: Mainstream Cinema and the Disaggregate Digital Composite.Lisa Purse - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (2):148-167.
    The digital surface in cinema has, throughout its relatively brief history, been subject to a familiar “iconophobic” tendency, documented by Rosalind Galt, to denigrate surface decoration as “empty spectacle”. In early scholarship on computer generated images in cinema, the digital surface's alleged seamlessness and “new depthlessness” frequently became an overdetermined nexus of loss: of material presence, of an indexical relation to the world and lived experience, and of the continuation of older traditions of narrative cinema. Today, (...)
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  32.  16
    L'enthousiasme, ou le cinéma à venir.Antony Hudek - 2007 - Multitudes 3 (3):117-127.
    Enthusiasm, a project launched in 2002 by the artists Neil Cummings and Marysia Lewandowska, inventories hundreds of films created by amateur filmmakers in Poland from the 1960s to the late 1980s. On the basis of this previously unavailable film archive, the two artists have elaborated a network or stratification of narratives – concerning a certain mode of collective film production and distribution, a visualization of socialism as lived from within, and a transmission of historical-political enthusiasm. This essay attempts to highlight (...)
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  33.  5
    Women’s cinema of trauma: Affect, movement, time.Dijana Jelača - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):335-352.
    This article analyses several notable examples of what the author calls the post-Yugoslav women’s cinema of trauma. These films made by women filmmakers challenge the standard tropes of war, as well as normative approaches to war cinema, by highlighting the intimate affective domain of experience, rather than large-scale narratives and collective emotions. The author focuses on the near-silent short and experimental works of Una Gunjak and Šejla Kamerić, and suggests that they offer insightful formal and narrative ways (...)
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  34.  11
    Deleuze and World Cinemas by David Martin-Jones.Gerald Sim - 2019 - Substance 48 (1):102-106.
    One has the distinct feeling that Deleuze and World Cinemas was already in the works when David Martin-Jones published Deleuze: Cinema and National Identity in 2006. In that earlier study, he married Deleuze with Homi K. Bhabha to produce constructive readings of both canonical and popular films. He considers these texts to be hybrid films that display qualities of both the movement-image and time-image, two Deleuzian concepts he deploys in showing how narrative time fashions national identity in distinctive (...)
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  35. “bad Form”: Contemporary Cinema’s Turn To The Perverse: David Lynch: Lost Highway Lars Von Trier: Breaking The Waves.Hester Joyce & Scott Wilson - 2009 - Colloquy 18:132.
    The form of Western mainstream film is the crux of its ideological efficiency: by using established formal techniques, films ensure audiences un- derstand that aesthetic decisions support and clarify the narrative to ensure maximum spectatorial satisfaction. However, some films exploit their formal aesthetics in order to prevent clarification, thwarting satisfaction in favour of viewing practices that can be considered perverse in that they withhold, suspend or obstruct immediate pleasure. Contemporary Western filmmaking in the mid-1990s witnessed the emergence of a (...)
     
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  36.  6
    Promised lands: cinema, geography, modernism.Sam Rohdie - 2001 - London: British Film Institute.
    This book is an innovative attempt by a leading film theorist to locate cinema--from the earliest experiments, via the work of Federico Fellini, Alfred Hitchcock, Roberto Rossellini, Orson Welles and many others, to contemporary European art cinema-- alongside philosophy, painting, geography and travel in terms of a history of modernism. The focal point of Promised Lands is a vast collection of geographical and ethnographic films and photographs made around the world, The Archives of the Planet . Based in (...)
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  37.  23
    Sergei Parajanov's Differential Cinema.Robert Efird - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (3):465-483.
    The films of Sergei Parajanov remain some of the most stylistically unique in the history of the medium and easily place him within the pantheon of the world's great filmmakers. This article offers a new perspective on Parajanov's art through a detailed examination of the two works at the center of his oeuvre, The Colour of Pomegranates and The Legend of Suram Fortress. In addition to their undeniable aesthetic value, these films may be appreciated as meaningful discourse on our conceptions (...)
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  38.  37
    What Isn't Cinema?Gerald Mast - 1974 - Critical Inquiry 1 (2):373-393.
    When Andre Bazin's most important essays on film were collected together in a single volume and titled What is Cinema? they raised a question that Bazin did not answer. Nor did he intend to. Nor has it been answered by any of the other theorists who have written what now seem to be the major works on film theory and who now seem the most influential spokesmen for the art. Rudolf Arnheim, Andre Bazin, Stanley Cavell, S. M. Einstein, Siegfried (...)
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  39.  12
    A inf'ncia no cinema de Abbas kiarostami.Darian Soheil Rahnamaye Rabbani & Julio Groppa Aquino - 2019 - Childhood and Philosophy 15:01-28.
    This article analyzes the theme of childhood in the films of Abbas Kiarostami in the context of the 1979 Iranian Revolution, which toppled the secular, modernizing regime of Shah Reza Pahlavi and ended in the establishment of Islamic Republic of Iran under the leadership of Ayatollah Khomeini. It pays special attention to the Institute for the Cultural Development of Children and Adolescents, or Kanun. Founded during the Shah’s regime with the objective of creating educational materials, Kanun played an important role (...)
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  40.  42
    Semiotics and Narrative.Thomas Sebeok (ed.) - 1991 - Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
    This article offers a historical perspective on the emergence of narrative as a major area of research, with a sampling of the range of possible approaches. Key early figures, including Propp, Levi-Strauss, the French structuralists (Greimas in particular), and the linguist Labov are discussed. It aims to provide a framework in which some key concepts can be examined, in particular the term narrativity, which regards narrative as a semiotic structure that transcends the verbal domain. The work of Metz (...)
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  41.  14
    Embodied cognition and cinema.Maarten Coëgnarts & Peter Kravanja (eds.) - 2015 - Leuven: Leuven University Press.
    The embodied cognition thesis claims that cognitive functions cannot be understood without making reference to the interactions between the brain, the body, and the environment. The meaning of abstract concepts is grounded in concrete experiences. This book is the first edited volume to explore the impact of the embodied cognition thesis on the scientific study of film. A team of scholars analyse the main aspects of film (narrative, style, music, sound, time, the viewer, emotion, perception, ethics, the frame, etc.) (...)
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  42.  6
    Impossible puzzle films: a cognitive approach to contemporary complex cinema.Miklós Kiss - 2017 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Edited by Steven Willemsen.
    Contemporary Complex Cinema. Complex conditions: the resurgence of narrative complexity ; Complex cinema as brain-candy for the empowered viewer ; Narrative taxonomies: simple, complex, puzzle plots -- Cognitive Approach to Contemporary Complex Cinema. Why an (embodied-)cognitive approach? ; Various forms of complexity and their effects on sense making ; Problematizing narrative linearity ; Complicating narrative structures and ontologies ; Under-stimulation and cognitive overload ; Contradictions and unreliabilities ; A cognitive approach to classifying complexity (...)
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  43.  7
    Music and narrative since 1900.Michael Leslie Klein & Nicholas W. Reyland (eds.) - 2012 - Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    This comprehensive volume offers a wide-ranging perspective on the stories that art music has told since the start of the 20th century. Contributors challenge the broadly held opinion that the loss of tonality in some music after 1900 also meant the loss of narrative in that music. To the contrary, the editors and essayists in this book demonstrate how experiments in approaching narrative in other media, such as fiction and cinema, suggested fresh possibilities for musical narrative, (...)
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  44.  86
    Narrative comprehension made difficult : film form and mnemonic devices in Memento.Stefano Ghislotti - 2009 - In Warren Buckland (ed.), Puzzle films: complex storytelling in contemporary cinema. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 87--106.
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  45. Classical Hollywood cinema: Narrational principles and procedures.David Bordwell - 1986 - In Philip Rosen (ed.), Narrative, apparatus, ideology: a film theory reader. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 17--34.
     
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  46.  12
    Film Worlds: A Philosophical Aesthetics of Cinema.Daniel Yacavone - 2014 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    _Film Worlds_ unpacks the significance of the "worlds" that narrative films create, offering an innovative perspective on cinema as art. Drawing on aesthetics and the philosophy of art in both the continental and analytic traditions, as well as classical and contemporary film theory, it weaves together multiple strands of thought and analysis to provide new understandings of filmic representation, fictionality, expression, self-reflexivity, style, and the full range of cinema's affective and symbolic dimensions. Always more than "fictional worlds" (...)
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  47.  28
    A Counter-narrative of Argentine Mourning.Cecilia Sosa - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (7-8):250-262.
    This article suggests an oblique reading of The Headless Woman, the latest film by Lucrecia Martel, a founder member of the so-called New Argentine Cinema and one of the major stylists of contemporary cinema. Unlike the many memorial films that surround the trauma of the dis- appeared in Argentina, The Headless Woman ‘countersigns’ the genre, proposing a hallucinatory experience of immersion within the affects of guilt, complicity and denial unleashed by the last dictatorship. By presenting the existentialist drama (...)
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  48.  19
    Where is the place for the thinking viewer in the cinema?Laura D'Olimpio - unknown
    Much of the current philosophy of film literature follows Walter Benjamin’s optimistic account and sees film as a vehicle for screening philosophical thought experiments, and offering new perspectives on issues that have relevance to everyday life. If these kinds of films allow for philosophical thinking, then they are like other so-called ‘high’ artworks in that they encourage social, political and economic critique of social norms. Yet, most popular films that are digested in large quantities are not of a high aesthetic (...)
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  49.  12
    Dalle fonti alla pellicola: la narrazione del medioevo russo nel cinema di Ejzenštejn e Tarkovskij.Luca Cardone - 2021 - Doctor Virtualis 16:295-313.
    L’articolo intende mettere in luce i rapporti tra le fonti storiche del Medioevo russo e la resa cinematografica della narrazione medievale nelle poetiche di Ejzenštejn e Tarkovskij. Congelando le filmografie dei due autori sulle due rispettive pellicole che hanno raccontato il Medioevo russo, l’_Alexandr Nevskij_ di Ejzenštejn e l’_Andrej Rublёv_ di Tarkovskij, l’articolo propone un’indagine critica sulle modalità d’approccio divergenti dei due registi rispetto al materiale storiografico e l’analisi della portata storica che la narrazione del Medioevo assume in un prodotto (...)
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  50.  9
    “You’ll never meet someone like me again”: Patty Jenkins’s Monster as Rogue Cinema.Michelle D. Wise - 2019 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 9 (9):66-80.
    Film is a powerful medium that can influence audience’s perceptions, values and ideals. As filmmaking evolved into a serious art form, it became a powerful tool for telling stories that require us to re-examine our ideology. While it remains popular to adapt a literary novel or text for the screen, filmmakers have more freedom to pick and choose the stories they want to tell. This freedom allows filmmakers to explore narratives that might otherwise go unheard, which include stories that feature (...)
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