|
|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
This collection brings together an exciting group of established
and emerging scholars to consider the history of feminist film
theory and new developments in the field and in film culture
itself. Opening the field up to urgent questions and covering such
topics as new experimental film, the digital image, consumerism,
activism, and pornography, Feminisms will be essential reading for
scholars of both film and feminism.
A feminist study of the mood, texture, tone, and multifaceted
meaning of director Sofia Coppola's aesthetic through her most
influential and well-known films. A Choice Outstanding Academic
Title 2019 "With this book Rogers has produced a sophisticated and
impassioned analysis of Coppola's work... Rogers's main argument -
that Coppola manipulates pleasurable images to unsettle rather than
mollify us - is utterly convincing. If nothing else, this certainly
hits home in relation to my own enchantment with Coppola's
work."-Bright Lights Film Journal All too often, the movies of
Sofia Coppola have been dismissed as "all style, no substance." But
such an easy caricature, as this engaging and accessible survey of
Coppola's oeuvre demonstrates, fundamentally misconstrues what are
rich, ambiguous, meaningful films. Drawing on insights from
feminist philosophy and psychology, the author here takes an
original approach to Coppola, exploring vital themes from the
subversion of patriarchy in The Virgin Suicides to the "female
gothic" in The Beguiled. As Rogers shows, far from endorsing a
facile and depoliticized postfeminism, Coppola's films instead
deploy beguilement, mood, and pleasure in the service of a robustly
feminist philosophy. From the Introduction: Sofia Coppola possesses
a highly sophisticated and intricate knowledge of how images come
to work on us; that is, she understands precisely how to construct
an image - what to add in and what to remove - in order to achieve
specific moods, tones and cinematic affects. She knows that similar
kinds of images can have vastly different effects on the viewer
depending on their context.... This monograph is an extended study
of Coppola's outstanding ability to think through and in images.
A feminist study of the mood, texture, tone, and multifaceted
meaning of director Sofia Coppola's aesthetic through her most
influential and well-known films. A Choice Outstanding Academic
Title 2019 "With this book Rogers has produced a sophisticated and
impassioned analysis of Coppola's work... Rogers's main argument -
that Coppola manipulates pleasurable images to unsettle rather than
mollify us - is utterly convincing. If nothing else, this certainly
hits home in relation to my own enchantment with Coppola's
work."-Bright Lights Film Journal All too often, the movies of
Sofia Coppola have been dismissed as "all style, no substance." But
such an easy caricature, as this engaging and accessible survey of
Coppola's oeuvre demonstrates, fundamentally misconstrues what are
rich, ambiguous, meaningful films. Drawing on insights from
feminist philosophy and psychology, the author here takes an
original approach to Coppola, exploring vital themes from the
subversion of patriarchy in The Virgin Suicides to the "female
gothic" in The Beguiled. As Rogers shows, far from endorsing a
facile and depoliticized postfeminism, Coppola's films instead
deploy beguilement, mood, and pleasure in the service of a robustly
feminist philosophy. From the Introduction: Sofia Coppola possesses
a highly sophisticated and intricate knowledge of how images come
to work on us; that is, she understands precisely how to construct
an image - what to add in and what to remove - in order to achieve
specific moods, tones and cinematic affects. She knows that similar
kinds of images can have vastly different effects on the viewer
depending on their context.... This monograph is an extended study
of Coppola's outstanding ability to think through and in images.
Peter Weir's haunting and allusive Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975),
set in 1900, tells the story of the mysterious disappearance of
three schoolgirls and their teacher on a trip to a local geological
formation. The film is widely hailed as a classic of new Australian
cinema, seen as exemplary of a peculiarly Australian style of
heritage filmmaking. Anna Backman Rogers' study considers Picnic
from feminist, psychoanalytic and decolonialising perspectives,
exploring its setting in a colonised Australian bushland in which
the Aboriginal people are a spectral presence in a landscape stolen
from them in pursuit of the white man's 'terra nullius'. She delves
into the film's production history, addressing director Weir's
influences and preoccupations at the time of its making, its
reception and its lasting impact on visual culture more broadly.
Rogers addresses the film's treatment of the young schoolgirls and
their teachers, seemingly, as embodiments of an archetype of the
'eternal feminine', as objects of the male gaze, and in terms of
ideas about female hysteria as a protest against gender norms. She
argues that Picnic is, in fact, highly subversive: a film that
requires its viewers to read its seductive surfaces against the
grain of the image in order to uncover its psychological depths.
Examines the politics of female authorship in relation to
contemporary documentary practicesThis book, like its twin volume
'Female Authorship and the Documentary Image', centres on pressing
issues in relation to female authorship in contemporary documentary
practices. Addressing the politics of representation and authorship
both behind and in front of the camera, a range of international
scholars now expand the theoretical and practical framework
informing the current scholarship on documentary cinema, which has
so far neglected questions of gender.'Female Agency and Documentary
Strategies' centres on how self-portraiture and contemporary
documentary manifestations such as blogging and the prevalent usage
of social media shape and inform female subjectivities and claims
to truth. The book examines the scope of authorship and agency open
to women using these technologies as a form of activism, centring
on notions of relationality, selfhood and subjectivity, and
includes interviews with Hong Kong based activist filmmaker and
scholar Vivian Wenli Lin and Spanish documentarist Mercedes
Alvarez.ContributorsAnna Backman Rogers, University of
GothenburgLinda C. Ehrlich, Writer, Teacher, EditorKerreen
Ely-Harper, Creative Media Researcher and Filmmaker Kristopher
Fallon, University of California, DavisCadence Kinsey, University
of YorkCarla Maia, Centro Universitario UNALidia Meras, Film
Historian and ResearcherAnna Misiak, Falmouth UniversityKim Munro,
Filmmaker, Artist and Teacher Kate Nash, University of LeedsJohn A.
Riley, Woosong UniversityMonica Titton, University of Applied Arts
and at the Academy of Fine Arts in ViennaBoel Ulfsdotter,
Independent Scholar Gail Vanstone, York University, Toronto
This book, like its twin volume Female Authorship and the
Documentary Image, centres on pressing issues in relation to female
authorship in contemporary documentary practices. Addressing the
politics of representation and authorship both behind and in front
of the camera, a range of international scholars now expand the
theoretical and practical framework informing the current
scholarship on documentary cinema, which has so far neglected
questions of gender. Female Agency and Documentary Strategies
centres on how self-portraiture and contemporary documentary
manifestations such as blogging and the prevalent usage of social
media shape and inform female subjectivities and claims to truth.
The book examines the scope of authorship and agency open to women
using these technologies as a form of activism, centring on notions
of relationality, selfhood and subjectivity, and includes
interviews with Hong Kong based activist filmmaker and scholar
Vivian Wenli Lin and Spanish documentarist Mercedes Alvarez.
This book, like its twin volume Female Authorship and Documentary
Strategies, centres on pressing issues in relation to female
authorship in contemporary documentary practices. Addressing the
politics of representation and authorship both behind and in front
of the camera, a range of international scholars now expand the
theoretical and practical framework informing the current
scholarship on documentary cinema, which has so far neglected
questions of gender. Female Authorship and the Documentary Image
engages with the relationship between female documentary filmmakers
and the documentary image. With a thematic focus on the documentary
image directly, within the more traditional arenas of theory and
practice and especially within the context of gaze and author
theory, the book also considers more philosophical questions of
aesthetics, home and identity within the contexts of female
subjectivity, globalisation and trauma. The book also includes a
dialogue on two key photographers, Hannah Wilke and Jo Spence, as
well as an interview with Taiwanese documentary filmmakers Singing
Chen and Wuna Wu.
This book examines crisis, transition and metamorphosis in American
independent cinema. By examining six films, all of which conform to
the notion of 'indiewood' (King 2005) from a formal perspective,
this book argues that American 'indie' cinema is not one merely in
crisis, but also of crisis. As a cinema that draws upon an American
cinematic heritage that explores various rites of passage (the teen
movie, the road movie, the western), these films deal in images of
crisis, transition and metamorphosis. This cinema of crisis offers
surprisingly subversive and critical images that both engage with
and undermine modes of cliched representation and thought by
exploring notions of ambiguity and opacity. Case studies include:
The Virgin Suicides, Elephant, Dead Man, Last Days, Somewhere and
Broken Flowers; engages with and develops on recent scholarship on
American independent film from a formal perspective and situates
analysis of indie film within the context of American generic
cinematic (and historical) traditions.
This two volume set investigates the theoretical and practical
framework that informs scholarship on documentary film that has
hitherto neglected questions of gender and female authorship. It
examines a wide array of documentary phenomena through global and
transnational case studies and interviews. It also place a special
emphasis on the nature of both individual and collective filmmaking
and the ways in which these dynamics inform documentary work.
|
|