John Wiley & Sons Film and Theory Cover This anthology offers a collection of some of the most provocative and influential writings of film .. Product #: 978-0-631-20626-2 Regular price: $42.90 $42.90 Auf Lager

Film and Theory

An Anthology

Stam, Robert / Miller, Toby (Herausgeber)

Cover

1. Auflage Januar 2000
880 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-0-631-20626-2
John Wiley & Sons

This anthology offers a collection of some of the most provocative and influential writings of film theory from the 1960s and 1970s, along with new directions from the last two decades. An introductory essay to the volume sums up developments in film theory from the beginning up through the 1980s, while introductions to specific groupings of essays summarize debates on those issues. Rather than look at film theory in terms of schools and allegiances, the editors investigate questions and problematics: What is the cinema? What is the cinematic apparatus? How do spectators differ in their desires? What is realism? Is realism desirable? Thus psychoanalysis, reception theory, cognitive theory, race theory, and feminism all provide partially valid answers to the question: What does the spectator want? This anthology's goal is to facilitate a polylogue among the theorists who have ignored or maligned one another and to deprovincialize film theory. Film Theory multiplies the perspectives and positions, the situations and locations, from which film theory is spoken.

Introduction.

Part I: The Author.

Part II: Film Language: Introduction: Robert Stam.

Part III: The Image and Technology.

Part IV: Text and Intertext.

Part V: The Question of Realism.

Part VI: Alternative Aesthetics.

Part VII: The Historical Spectator/Audience.

Part VIII: Apparatus Theory.

Part IX: The Nature of the Gaze.

Part X: Class and the Culture Industries.

Part XI: Stars and Performance.

Part XII: Permutations of Difference.

Part XIII: The Postmodern and the Global.

Bibliography.

Index.
Toby Miller is a Professor in the Cinema Studies Department
at New York University. He is the author of a wide range of work in
cultural studies, including two recent books, Technologies of
Truth (1998) and (with Alec McHoul) Popular Culture and
Everyday Life (1998). He is also co-editor of the journal
Social Text and with Robert Stam co-editor of The
Blackwell Companion to Film Studies.

Robert Stam is a Professor in the Cinema Studies
Department at New York University. His many books include Film
Theory: An Introduction (Blackwell Publishers, 1999);
Tropical Multiculturalism: A Comparative History of Race in
Brazilian Cinema and Culture (1997); Unthinking
Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism and the Media, with Ella Shohat
(1994), which won the Katherine Singer Kovocs "Best Film Book
Award"; and Subversive Pleasures: Bakhtin, Cultural Criticism,
and Film (1992).

R. Stam, New York University; T. Miller, University of California at Riverside