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Though intimacy has been a wide concern in the humanities, it has
received little critical attention in film studies. I Feel
Different Inside: Essays on Intimacy in English-Speaking Cinema
thus proposes to investigate both the potential intimacy of cinema
as a medium and the possibility of a cinema of intimacy where it is
least expected. As a notion that relies on binaries such as inside
and outside, surface and depth, public and private, and self and
other, intimacy, because it implies sharing, is especially apt to
call into question the borders between these binaries, and,
accordingly, the border which separates mainstream cinema and
independent, underground or auteur cinema. Following on Thomas
Elsaesser's theoretical interrogation of the relationship between
the intimacy of cinema and the cinema of intimacy, the essays,
organized mainly according to chronology, explore intimacy in
silent and classical Hollywood cinema, underground, documentary and
animation films, and finally contemporary Hollywood, British,
Canadian and Australian cinema, from a variety of approaches that
are grounded in neo-formalism and narratology, phenomenology,
psychoanalysis and cognitive psychology, cultural, gender,
reception and film genre studies.
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Comics and Adaptation (Hardcover)
Benoit Mitaine, David Roche, Isabelle Schmitt-Pitiot; Translated by Aarnoud Rommens
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R3,246
Discovery Miles 32 460
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Contributions by Jan Baetens, Alain Boillat, Philippe Bourdier,
Laura Caraballo, Thomas Faye, Pierre Floquet, Jean-Paul Gabilliet,
Christophe Gelly, Nicolas Labarre, Benoit Mitaine, David Roche,
Isabelle Schmitt-Pitiot, Dick Tomasovic, and Shannon Wells-Lassagne
Both comics studies and adaptation studies have grown separately
over the past twenty years. Yet there are few in-depth studies of
comic books and adaptations together. Available for the first time
in English, this collection pores over the phenomenon of comic
books and adaptation, sifting through comics as both sources and
results of adaptation. Essays shed light on the many ways
adaptation studies inform research on comic books and content
adapted from them. Contributors concentrate on fidelity to the
source materials, comparative analysis, forms of media, adaptation
and myth, adaptation and intertextuality, as well as adaptation and
ideology. After an introduction that assesses adaptation studies as
a framework, the book examines comics adaptations of literary texts
as more than just illustrations of their sources. Essayists then
focus on adaptations of comics, often from a transmedia
perspective. Case studies analyze both famous and lesser-known
American, Belgian, French, Italian, and Spanish comics. Essays
investigate specific works, such as Robert Louis Stevenson's The
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Castilian epic poem
Poema de Mio Cid, Ray Bradbury's Martian Chronicles, French comics
artist Jacques Tardi's adaptation 120, rue de la Gare, and Frank
Miller's Sin City. In addition to Marvel Comics's blockbusters,
topics include various uses of adaptation, comic book adaptations
of literary texts, narrative deconstruction of performance and
comic book art, and many more.
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Comics and Adaptation (Paperback)
BenoA (R)t Mitaine, David Roche, Isabelle Schmitt-Pitiot; Aarnoud Rommens
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R1,115
Discovery Miles 11 150
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Contributions by Jan Baetens, Alain Boillat, Philippe Bourdier,
Laura Cecilia Caraballo, Thomas Faye, Pierre Floquet, Jean-Paul
Gabilliet, Christophe Gelly, Nicolas Labarre, Benoit Mitaine, David
Roche, Isabelle Schmitt-Pitiot, Dick Tomasovic, and Shannon
Wells-LassagneBoth comics studies and adaptation studies have grown
separately over the past twenty years. Yet there are few in-depth
studies of comic books and adaptations together. Available for the
first time in English, this collection pores over the phenomenon of
comic books and adaptation, sifting through comics as both sources
and results of adaptation. Essays shed light on the many ways
adaptation studies inform research on comic books and content
adapted from them. Contributors concentrate on fidelity to the
source materials, comparative analysis, forms of media, adaptation
and myth, adaptation and intertextuality, as well as adaptation and
ideology. After an introduction that assesses adaptation studies as
a framework, the book examines comics adaptations of literary texts
as more than just illustrations of their sources. Essayists then
focus on adaptations of comics, often from a transmedia
perspective. Case studies analyze both famous and lesser-known
American, Belgian, French, Italian, and Spanish comics. Essays
investigate specific works, such as Robert Louis Stevenson's The
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Castilian epic poem
Poema de Mio Cid, Ray Bradbury's Martian Chronicles, French comics
artist Jacques Tardi's adaptation 120, rue de la Gare, and Frank
Miller's Sin City. In addition to Marvel Comics' blockbusters,
topics include various uses of adaptation, comic book adaptations
of literary texts, narrative deconstruction of performance and
comic book art, and many more.
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