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Recording Reality, Desiring the Real (Paperback, New): Elizabeth Cowie Recording Reality, Desiring the Real (Paperback, New)
Elizabeth Cowie
R621 Discovery Miles 6 210 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Documentary has once again emerged as one of the most vital cultural forms, whether seen in cinemas or inside the home, as digital, film, or video. In "Recording Reality, Desiring the Real," Elizabeth Cowie looks at the history of documentary and its contemporary forms, showing how it has been simultaneously understood as factual, as story, as art, and as political, addressing the seeming paradox between the pleasures of spectacle in the documentary and its project of informing and educating.
Cowie claims that, as a radical film form, documentary has been a way for filmmakers to acknowledge historical and contemporary realities by presenting images of these realities. If documentary is the desire to know reality through its images and sounds, she asks, what kind of speaking (and speaking about) emerges in documentary, and how are we engaged by it? In considering this and other questions, Cowie examines a range of noteworthy films, including Spike Lee's "When the Levees Broke," John Huston's "Let There Be Light," and Milica Tomic's "Portrait of My Mother.""
Recording Reality, Desiring the Real "stakes documentary's central place in cinema as both an art form and a form of social engagement, which together create a new understanding of spectatorship.

Representing the Woman - Cinema and Psychoanalysis (Paperback): Elizabeth Cowie Representing the Woman - Cinema and Psychoanalysis (Paperback)
Elizabeth Cowie
R1,645 Discovery Miles 16 450 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Representing the Woman: Cinema and Psychoanalysis examines the theory and politics of representation in narrative film. Questioning current accounts of cinema's pleasures for men and women, Elizabeth Cowie draws on the psychoanalytic theory of Freud and Lacan to propose a new understanding of the relation of identification, fantasy and the drives, and of voyeurism and fetishism to the pleasures of cinema and to the making of the feminine and masculine spectators of film.

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