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The historic election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the
United States had a significant impact on both America and the
world at large. By voting an African American into the highest
office, those who elected Obama did not necessarily look past race,
but rather didn't let race prevent them for casting their ballots
in his favor. In addition to reflecting the changing political
climate, Obama's presidency also spurred a cultural shift, notably
in music, television, and film. In Movies in the Age of Obama: The
Era of Post-Racial and Neo-Racist Cinema, David Garrett Izzo
presents a varied collection of essays that examine films produced
since the 2008 election. The contributors to these essays comment
on a number of films in which race and "otherness" are pivotal
elements. In addition to discussing such films as Beasts of the
Southern Wild, Black Dynamite, The Blind Side, The Butler, Django
Unchained, The Help, and Invictus, this collection also includes
essays that probe racial elements in The Great Gatsby, The Hunger
Games, and The Mist. The volume concludes with several essays that
examine the 2013 Academy Award winner for best picture, 12 Years a
Slave. Though Obama's election may have been the main impetus for a
resurgence of black films, this development is a bit more
complicated. Moviemakers have long responded to the changing times,
so it is inevitable that the Obama presidency would spark an
increase in films that comment, either subtly or overtly, on the
current cultural climate. By looking at the issue these films
address, Movies in the Age of Obama will be of value to film
scholars, of course, but also to those interested in other
disciplines, including history, politics, and cultural studies.
Over the course of the past two decades, horror cinema around the
globe has become increasingly preoccupied with the concept of loss.
Grief in Contemporary Horror Cinema: Screening Loss examines the
theme of grief as it represented both indie and mainstream films,
including works such as Jennifer Kent's watershed film The
Babadook, Juan Antonio Bayona's award-sweeping El orfanato, Ari
Aster's genre-straddling Midsommar, and Lars von Trier's visually
stunning Melancholia. Analyzing depictions of grief ranging from
the intimate grief of a small family to the collective grief of an
entire nation, the essays illustrate how these works serve to
provide unity, catharsis, and-sometimes-healing.
A Critical Companion to Terry Gilliam provides a fresh, up-to-date
exploration of the director's films and artistic practices, ranging
from his first film Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) up until
his recently released and latest film The Man Who Killed Don
Quixote (2018). This volume presents Gilliam as a director whose
films weave an avant-garde cinematic style, imaginative
exaggeration, and social critique together. Consequently, while his
films can seem artistically chaotic and can, thus, have the effect
of frustrating and upsetting the viewer, the essays in this volume
show that this is part of a very disciplined creative plan to
achieve the defamiliarization of various accepted notions of human
and social life.
The historic election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the
United States had a significant impact on both America and the
world at large. By voting an African American into the highest
office, those who elected Obama did not necessarily look past race,
but rather didn't let race prevent them for casting their ballots
in his favor. In addition to reflecting the changing political
climate, Obama's presidency also spurred a cultural shift, notably
in music, television, and film. In Movies in the Age of Obama: The
Era of Post-Racial and Neo-Racist Cinema, David Garrett Izzo
presents a varied collection of essays that examine films produced
since the 2008 election. The contributors to these essays comment
on a number of films in which race and "otherness" are pivotal
elements. In addition to discussing such films as Beasts of the
Southern Wild, Black Dynamite, The Blind Side, The Butler, Django
Unchained, The Help, and Invictus, this collection also includes
essays that probe racial elements in The Great Gatsby, The Hunger
Games, and The Mist. The volume concludes with several essays that
examine the 2013 Academy Award winner for best picture, 12 Years a
Slave. Though Obama's election may have been the main impetus for a
resurgence of black films, this development is a bit more
complicated. Moviemakers have long responded to the changing times,
so it is inevitable that the Obama presidency would spark an
increase in films that comment, either subtly or overtly, on the
current cultural climate. By looking at the issue these films
address, Movies in the Age of Obama will be of value to film
scholars, of course, but also to those interested in other
disciplines, including history, politics, and cultural studies.
Explore queer themes in films from Hong Kong gangster flicks to
Bollywood melodramas Although Asian films have reached a new height
in popularity worldwide, Queer Asian Cinema: Shadows in the Shade
is the first full-length book in English solely devoted to
examining the aesthetics and politics of homosexuality in Asian
films. This unique book presents multiple points of view on the
portrayal of gay, lesbian, and transgendered people in film
throughout Asia. From the subversive sadomasochism of Japan's "pink
films" to the hard-boiled world of Hong Kong's gangster movies,
Queer Asian Cinema analyzes and discusses attitudes toward
homosexuality in the full spectrum of Asian film. In addition to
studies of the representation of identified gay men, lesbians, and
transgendered individuals, it reveals the hidden homoerotic subtext
of otherwise conventional films.Queer Asian Cinema: Shadows in the
Shade examines diverse aspects of Asian films, including: the
political and psychological links between feudal and sadomasochist
hierarchies the inevitable punishment of homoerotic bonds in
gangster films the integration of the homosexual couple into the
Confucian family structure in Korean films the complexities of
cross-gender casting the differences between transvestism and
cross-dressing the definition of male genitalia as obsceneQueer
Asian Cinema: Shadows in the Shade brings together experts in both
film-making and movie criticism, providing a balanced viewpoint to
unite the worlds of academic and popular perceptions on this
subject. It opens an exciting discussion of this important and
largely neglected area of cinematic discourse.
Explore queer themes in films from Hong Kong gangster flicks to
Bollywood melodramas Although Asian films have reached a new height
in popularity worldwide, Queer Asian Cinema: Shadows in the Shade
is the first full-length book in English solely devoted to
examining the aesthetics and politics of homosexuality in Asian
films. This unique book presents multiple points of view on the
portrayal of gay, lesbian, and transgendered people in film
throughout Asia. From the subversive sadomasochism of Japan's "pink
films" to the hard-boiled world of Hong Kong's gangster movies,
Queer Asian Cinema analyzes and discusses attitudes toward
homosexuality in the full spectrum of Asian film. In addition to
studies of the representation of identified gay men, lesbians, and
transgendered individuals, it reveals the hidden homoerotic subtext
of otherwise conventional films.Queer Asian Cinema: Shadows in the
Shade examines diverse aspects of Asian films, including: the
political and psychological links between feudal and sadomasochist
hierarchies the inevitable punishment of homoerotic bonds in
gangster films the integration of the homosexual couple into the
Confucian family structure in Korean films the complexities of
cross-gender casting the differences between transvestism and
cross-dressing the definition of male genitalia as obsceneQueer
Asian Cinema: Shadows in the Shade brings together experts in both
film-making and movie criticism, providing a balanced viewpoint to
unite the worlds of academic and popular perceptions on this
subject. It opens an exciting discussion of this important and
largely neglected area of cinematic discourse.
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Andy's Lost Poetry (Paperback)
M Julianne Grossman; Benjamin Andrew Grossman; Edited by Benjamin Andrew Grossman
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R244
Discovery Miles 2 440
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