Results for 'Black cinema'

940 found
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  1. Black cinema and aesthetics.Clyde R. Taylor - 2003 - In Tommy Lee Lott & John P. Pittman (eds.), A Companion to African-American Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  2.  19
    Cartographic Cinema (review).Joel Black - 2007 - Symploke 15 (1):372-374.
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  3. Questioning discourses of diaspora: "Black" cinema as symptom.Saër Maty Bâ - 2012 - In Saër Maty Bâ & Will Higbee (eds.), De-westernizing film studies. New York: Routledge.
     
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  4.  30
    Rites of Realism: Essays on Corporeal Cinema (review).Joel Black - 2004 - Symploke 12 (1):290-291.
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  5.  31
    Queer Black adolescence, the impasse, and the pedagogy of cinema.Asilia Franklin-Phipps & Laura Smithers - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (7):728-739.
    This paper considers the potential of impasses within cinematic assemblages and the pedagogy of cinema to expand the possible horizons of Black queer youth. Black queerness in film provides pedagogical tools for exploring the limits of the category of queer. Both Barry Jenkins’s Moonlight and Dee Rees’s Pariah counter uncritical narratives of pathology, and are research data in their explorations of affective dimensions of gender, sexuality, race, poverty, and love through moving-images and sound. After situating the context (...)
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  6.  29
    How It Feels: Black Screen as Negative Event in Early Cinema and 9/11 Films.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:409-438.
    In this essay I engage the perspective of film phenomenology to analyze the black screen as a frame-breaking negative experience, based on an understanding of cinema as event. Relying on Vivian Sobchack’s phenomenological approach and taking inspiration from Cecil M. Hepworth’s How It Feels to Be Run Over, a case in point for a method predicated on the question of “how,” I place emphasis on the “film’s body” and consciousness which, through its own paralysis and impairment, affects the (...)
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  7. Black on white: Film noir and the epistemology of race in recent african american cinema.Dan Flory - 2000 - Journal of Social Philosophy 31 (1):82–116.
  8.  4
    Black Visual Intonation in Arthur Jafa’s Audiovisual Experiment.Irene Machado - 2024 - Bakhtiniana 19 (4):e65290p.
    RESUMO O objeto de estudo do presente artigo é o conceito de entoação visual negra formulado pelo multiartista Arthur Jafa no vídeo-ensaio Love Is the Message, the Message Is Death (2016). Com o objetivo de descobrir a singularidade do cinema negro na composição fílmica, o artista construiu um experimento e examina como memórias encarnadas afloram sob forma de cantos e danças, realinhando formas culturais tradicionais que a travessia diaspórica dispersou. Conclui-se, assim, que a singularidade estético-política do cinema negro (...)
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  9.  35
    Gillespie, Michael Boyce. Film Blackness: American cinema and the idea of Black film. Duke university press, 2016, 248 pp., 50 b&w illus., $23.95 paper. [REVIEW]Kevin Jack Hagopian - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 76 (1):119-123.
  10.  19
    Gillespie, Michael Boyce. Film Blackness: American cinema and the idea of Black film. Duke university press, 2016, 248 pp., 50 b&w illus., $23.95 paper. [REVIEW]Kevin Jackhagopian - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 76 (1).
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  11.  89
    The Contribution and the Influence of Black African Cinema.Jacques Binet - 1980 - Diogenes 28 (110):66-82.
    Since 1963 almost 200 films have been made by African authors. This provides a suitable quantity of documents to permit an attempt to study them as a group. These films are the work of a hundred directors and so perhaps can allow an analysis of their personalities. But can we suppose that they represent all of Africa? This is hardly probable. The film-makers and their crews belong to the upper social levels. Educated, well-traveled on other continents, highly qualified intellectually and (...)
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  12. The reading of a still: The evocation of death in Dorothy Dandridge's photographs (Black American cinema).C. Regester - 1998 - In Donald Kuspit (ed.), Art Criticism. pp. 13--1.
     
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  13. Unmade according to his image" or, night for day: Blanchot and the blacknesses of cinema figure.Kevin Bell - 2018 - In Christopher Langlois (ed.), Understanding Blanchot, understanding modernism. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  14.  2
    Black screens, white frames: Gilles Deleuze and the filmmaking machine.Tanya Shilina-Conte - 2024 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter delineates the theory of the black or white screen as a force of deterritorialization in minor, or modern political cinema. In the previous chapter I relied on the molar and the molecular for the description of deterritorializations in corporeal and cerebral modern cinema, but here I shift emphasis to the major and the minor. These latter concepts help us to better understand the connection between thought, body, and social milieu. Various impossibilities in the social field (...)
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  15.  32
    Philosophy, Black Film, Film Noir.Dan Flory - 2008 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    In the past two decades, African American filmmakers like Spike Lee have made significant contributions to the dialogue about race in the United States by adapting techniques from classic _film noir _to black American cinema. This book is the first to examine these artistic innovations in detail from a philosophical perspective informed by both cognitive film theory and critical race theory. Dan Flory explores the techniques and themes that are used in black _film noir _to orchestrate the (...)
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  16.  15
    Cinema, media, and human flourishing.Timothy Corrigan (ed.) - 2022 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The range of topics in this volume covers a multitude of historical periods and topics, which in turn figure in the new media environments of contemporary life. These include discussions of the Aristotelian and classical models of a "good life" that inform animated fairy tales today, 1930s French and Hollywood films which respond to the dire need for productive human relationships in a turbulent decade, the polemical positions of black film criticism through the lens of James Baldwin's work, a (...)
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  17.  50
    “O Himmlisch Licht!”: cinema and the withdrawal of the gods.Leslie Hill - 2012 - Angelaki 17 (4):139 - 155.
    In Godard's Le Mépris [Contempt, 1963], Fritz Lang, playing a fictional version of himself, evokes the complex relationship between cinema's future and the end of cinema by citing a famous verse from the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin, according to which what counts in respect of poetry is henceforth no longer the secret persistence of the gods, nor their covert proximity, but their enduring absence. This paper explores the implications of that insight as they come to affect first Godard's (...)
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  18.  23
    Black Cinematic Poethics.William Brown - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (3):401-423.
    Drawing upon the work of various critical race theorists, including Frantz Fanon, Kevin Quashie, Hortense J. Spillers, Calvin L. Warren and Sylvia Wynter, this article suggests that if Blackness has historically been, and continues to be, cast outside of being and into being, or what Wynter terms désêtre, then for Blackness to give expression to itself and/or to prove (or improvise) its “aliveness” is a necessarily “poetic” process, given that poetry/ poiesis is the bringing into being of that which previously (...)
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  19.  4
    Rizvana Bradley, Anteaesthetics: Black Aesthesis and the Critique of Form.Jonathan Pugh - 2024 - Theory, Culture and Society 41 (7-8):271-277.
    Taking aesthetics as a racial regime of modernity, the focus of Bradley’s Anteaesthetics is experiments in Black art which are not ‘worlding but an illimitable descent made to come before the world’. With a powerful introduction reflecting upon Nina Simone at the Montreal Jazz festival, and chapters which take us through 19th-century paintings, cinema, texts, video installations, and digital art, Anteaesthetics forces us to encounter the horror, beauty, and racially gendered dimensions of a negative inhabitation substantiated through the (...)
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  20. Towards a Definition of Black Cinematic Horror.Nicholas Whittaker - 2022 - Film and Philosophy 26:23-40.
    In this essay, I sketch a preliminary, phenomenological definition of black horror cinema. I argue that black horror films are films in which blackness and antiblackness are depicted as unintelligible. I build this definition first by arguing that horror films generally evoke a mood of Heideggerian uncanniness, by which I mean that they create a global affective state in which the world is experienced as unintelligible. I then turn to the Afropessimist theorizing of Frank B. Wilderson, who (...)
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  21.  62
    (1 other version)Existential feelings: How cinema makes us feel alive.Dina Mendonça - 2012 - Cinema 3:211-228.
    This paper explores the role of existential feelings in films, and the impact of theconnections between cinema and existential feelings for emotional life in general. After explaining the notion of existential feelings and illustrating them in films with Black Swan and The Help , the paper concludes that movies offer provide insights about our own existential feelings because films promote emotional awareness by the way they function as emotional laboratories. This will lead to an examination the presence and (...)
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  22. Boys, boyz, bois: an ethics of Black masculinity in film and popular media.Keith M. Harris - 2006 - New York: Routledge.
    Boys, Boyz, Bois concerns questions of ethics, gender and race in popular American images, national discourse and cultural production by and about black men. The book proposes an ethics of masculinity, as ethnics refers to a system of morality and valuation and as ethics refers to a care of the self and ethical subject formation. The texts of analysis include recent films by black/African American filmmakers, gansta rap and hip-hop and black star persona: texts ranging from Blaxploitation (...)
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  23.  43
    June Givanni’s Pan-African Cinema Archive: A Diasporic Feminist Dwelling Space.June Givanni, Sarita Malik & Aditi Jaganathan - 2020 - Feminist Review 125 (1):94-109.
    What is the role of cultural archives in creating and sustaining connections between diasporic communities? Through an analysis of an audiovisual archive that has sought to bring together representations of and by African, Caribbean and Asian people, this article discusses the relationship between diasporic film, knowledge production and feminist solidarity. Focusing on a self-curated, UK-based archive, the June Givanni Pan-African Cinema Archive, we explore the potentiality of archives for carving out spaces of diasporic connectivity and resistance. This archive assembles (...)
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  24.  15
    Conjuring Caliban's Woman: Moving beyond Cinema's Memory of Man in Praise House.Ayanna Dozier - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (3):503-518.
    Julie Dash's experimental short film, Praise House, situates conjuring as both a narrative and formal device to invent new memories around Black womanhood that exceed our representation within the epistemes of Man. I view Praise House as an example of conjure-cinema with which we can evaluate how Black feminist filmmakers, primarily working in experimental film, manipulate the poetic structure and aesthetics of film to affect audiences rather than rely on representational narrative alone. Following the scholarship of Sylvia (...)
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  25. Paying Freedom Dues: Marxism, Black Radicalism, and Blaxploitation Science Fiction.Mark Bould - 2016 - In Ewa Mazierska & Alfredo Suppia (eds.), Red Alert: Marxist Approaches to Science Fiction Cinema. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
     
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  26.  1
    Entoação visual negra em experimento audiovisual de Arthur Jafa.Irene Machado - 2024 - Bakhtiniana 19 (4):e65290p.
    ABSTRACT The purpose of this paper is to study the idea of black visual intonation in the video-essay Love Is the Message, the Message Is Death (2016) by visual artist Arthur Jafa. With the aim at discovering the singularity of black cinema in filmic composition, the artist carried out an experiment to examine how embodied memories emerge in the form of songs and dances, recovering traditional cultural features that the Afro-Atlantic diaspora dissipated. We find that the aesthetic-political (...)
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  27. A Companion to African-American Philosophy.Tommy Lee Lott & John P. Pittman (eds.) - 2003 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    Part I Philosophic Traditions Introduction to Part I 3 1 Philosophy and the Afro-American Experience 7 CORNEL WEST 2 African-American Existential Philosophy 33 LEWIS R. GORDON 3 African-American Philosophy: A Caribbean Perspective 48 PAGET HENRY 4 Modernisms in Black 67 FRANK M. KIRKLAND 5 The Crisis of the Black Intellectual 87 HORTENSE J. SPILLERS Part II The Moral and Political Legacy of Slavery Introduction to Part II 107 6 Kant and Knowledge of Disappearing Expression 110 RONALD A. T. (...)
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  28.  17
    Film's Religious Algorithm.Anat Pick - 2019 - Paragraph 42 (3):387-402.
    This article explores Simone Weil's concept of ‘affliction’ and the black poetics of Saidiya Hartman and Fred Moten in relation to two nonfiction films: Artur Aristakisyan's Palms and Foroug...
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  29.  15
    Rebellions Are Built on Hope.Terrance MacMullan - 2023 - In Jason T. Eberl & Kevin S. Decker (eds.), Star Wars and Philosophy Strikes Back. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. pp. 122–131.
    Rogue One is a complex film that invites a wide range of philosophical questioning. This chapter focuses on the film's political aspect. Rogue One powerfully illustrates an essential and timely claim made about the nature of democracy by John Dewey. Rogue One is significantly different from earlier Star Wars films. It does not offer a simple, mythic morality tale, where the difference between right and wrong is as stark as the contrast between Leia's white gown and Vader's black mask. (...)
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  30.  28
    The Colour of Film-Philosophy.William Brown - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (2):197-221.
    This article draws upon the work of Sylvia Wynter and W.E.B. Du Bois in order to propose that film-philosophy has historically not paid due attention to race. Drawing upon the former’s concept of “the sociogenic principle”, as well as the latter’s theories of “the colour line” and “double-consciousness”, the article argues that modernity has been constructed coterminously with whiteness, as well as a “photographic/cinematographic” logic whereby Blackness is cast into a “negative” realm. That is, while modernity might be white, more (...)
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  31.  24
    (1 other version)Editors’ Introduction.Alan D. Schrift & Shannon Sullivan - 2023 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 37 (3):237-242.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Editors' IntroductionAlan D. Schrift and Shannon SullivanThe articles in this special issue of the Journal of Speculative Philosophy were selected from revised versions of papers that were originally presented at the sixtieth annual meeting of the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP) at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas October 13–15, 2022.Michael Hardt of Duke University and Patricia Pisters of the University of Amsterdam gave the SPEP (...)
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  32.  2
    Paracinema in Socialist Romania During the 1980s - the VHS and the Emergence of Alternative Film Repertoires.Alexandra Bardan - 2025 - History of Communism in Europe 15:141-162.
    This article examines the emergence of video home systems (VHS) in socialist Romania within the broader context of state-controlled cinema industry and through the conceptual lens of “paracinema.” Rather than viewing video as a disruption in film consumption, the study explores films as both cultural products and commodities. The analysis addresses the social construc­tion of paracinema repertoires in a broader context and uses discourse analysis to explore ruptures and continuities in the polarised framing of films. The results show an (...)
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  33.  24
    Shifting the geography of reason: gender, science and religion.Marina Paola Banchetti-Robino & Clevis Headley (eds.) - 2007 - Newcastle, U.K.: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    MARINA PAOLA BANCHETTI-ROBINO is Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Florida Atlantic University. Her areas of research include phenomenology, philosophy of language, philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, and zoosemiotics. Her publications have appeared in such journals as Synthese, Husserl Studies, Idealistic Studies, Philosophy East and West, and The Review of Metaphysics. She has also contributed essays to The Role of Pragmatics in Contemporary Philosophy (1997), Feminist Phenomenology (2000), and Islamic Philosophy and Occidental Phenomenology on the Perennial (...)
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  34.  38
    Pikachu's Tears: Children's Perspectives on Violence in Hong Kong.Sealing Cheng - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):216-225.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:216 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Sealing Cheng Pikachu’s Tears: Children’s Perspectives on Violence in Hong Kong How do children experience the sudden onset of massive unrest, violence, and police brutality? It has been difficult even for many adults to process how Hong Kong—a cosmopolitan city known for its stability and low crime rate—descended overnight, on June 12, 2019, into tear gas and (...)
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  35.  19
    The Hands of the Projectionist.Lisa Cartwright - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (3):443-464.
    ArgumentThis essay considers the work of projection and the hand of the projectionist as important components of the social space of the cinema as it comes into being in the nineteenth century and the early decades of the twentieth. I bring the concept of Maurice Merleau-Ponty on the place of the body as an entity that applies itself to the world “like a hand to an instrument” into a discussion of the pre-cinematic projector as an instrument that we can (...)
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  36.  11
    Aesthetics of discomfort: conversations on disquieting art.Frederick Luis Aldama - 2016 - Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Edited by Herbert Lindenberger.
    Through a series of provocative conversations, Frederick Luis Aldama and Herbert Lindenberger, who have written widely on literature, film, music, and art, locate a place for the discomforting and the often painfully unpleasant within aesthetics. The conversational format allows them to travel informally across many centuries and many art forms. They have much to tell one another about the arts since the advent of modernism soon after 1900—the nontonal music, for example, of the Second Vienna School, the chance-directed music and (...)
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  37.  53
    A Debilitating Colonial Duration: Reconfiguring Fanon.Alia Al-Saji - 2023 - Research in Phenomenology 53 (3):279-307.
    I argue that the temporality of colonialism is a disabling duration. To elaborate, I focus on a site in Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks where disability/debility and racism intertwine – Fanon’s refusal of “amputation” in his experience of cinema. While such disability metaphors have been problematized as ableist, I argue that amputation is more than a metaphor of lack. It extends what racializing debilitation means and makes tangible the prosthetics that colonialism imposes and the phantoms and affects (...)
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  38.  26
    Mort à voir, mort à vendre. [REVIEW]Michael Bertram Crowe - 1971 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 20:365-366.
    This interesting study in religious sociology takes as its subject the various attitudes of society towards death. These attitudes are reflected in the mass-media of communication. Ten daily news papers published in Paris in a given week in 1969 were systematically studied for references to death; likewise the 399 films shown in Paris-cinemas during 1968, the television programmes for the first six-months of 1969 and the popular songs broadcast from two selected radio stations. The result is found in three long (...)
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  39.  7
    Staring Back.Chris Marker - 2007 - MIT Press.
    Photographs by one of French cinema's most influential and enigmatic artists. Any new film and any new book by French filmmaker Chris Marker is an event. Marker gave film lovers one of their most memorable experiences with La Jetée —a time-travel montage set after a nuclear war that inspired Terry Gilliam's Twelve Monkeys. His still camerawork is not as well known, but Marker has been taking photographs as long as he has been making films. Staring Back presents 200 (...)-and-white photographs from Marker's personal archives, taken from 1952 to 2006. Some of the photographs are related to his classic films, others are portraits of famous faces, but most are pictures of people Marker has encountered as he has traveled the world. The central section of the book contains a series of photographs documenting political protests Marker has witnessed, including the march on the Pentagon in 1967, the events of May 1968 in Paris, and the tumultuous 2006 demonstrations protesting the French government's proposed employment policies. The photographs are accompanied by several unpublished texts by Marker, including the English language text of The Case of the Grinning Cat and Marker's annotations for some of the photos. The book—which appears in conjunction with an exhibition at the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University—also includes essays by Wexner Center curator Bill Horrigan and art historian Molly Nesbit. (shrink)
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  40. The Tanner Lectures on Human Values: Volume 31.Mark Matheson (ed.) - 2012 - University of Utah Press.
    The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, founded July 1, 1978, at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, was established by the American scholar, industrialist, and philanthropist Obert Clark Tanner. Lectureships are awarded to outstanding scholars or leaders in broadly defined fields of human values and transcend ethnic, national, religious, or ideological distinctions. Volume 31 features lectures given during the academic year 2010–2011 at Yale University, The University of Utah, The University of Michigan, Stanford University, Princeton University, and Harvard University. _Contributors: __Rebecca Goldstein, (...)
     
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  41. Conviviality and parallax in David Olusoga’s Black and British: A Forgotten History.Jack Black - 2019 - European Journal of Cultural Studies 22 (5-6):979-995.
    Through examining the BBC television series, Black and British: A Forgotten History, written and presented by the historian David Olusoga, and in extending Paul Gilroy’s assertion that the everyday banality of living with difference is now an ordinary part of British life, this article considers how Olusoga’s historicization of the Black British experience reflects a convivial rendering of UK multiculture. In particular, when used alongside Žižek’s notion of parallax, it is argued that understandings of convivial culture can be (...)
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  42. Black response.Rufus Black - 2024 - In Deane-Peter Baker (ed.), Ethics at war: how should military personnel make ethical decisions? New York, NY: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  43. Metaphors We Live by.Max Black - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 40 (2):208-210.
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  44.  55
    Interview with Conrad Black.Conrad Black & William Kauffman - 1997 - The Chesterton Review 23 (3):376-385.
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  45.  42
    (1 other version)Models and Metaphors: Studies in Language and Philosophy.Max Black - 1962 - Ithaca, N.Y.,: Cornell University Press.
    Author Max Black argues that language should conform to the discovered regularities of experience it is radically mistaken to assume that the conception of language is a mirror of reality.
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  46.  66
    Conrad Black Defends His Friend Ann Coulter.Conrad Black - 2009 - The Chesterton Review 35 (1/2):264-267.
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  47.  54
    Conrad Black.Barbara Amiel Black - 2008 - The Chesterton Review 34 (3-4):810-818.
  48. Imagination and estimation: Arabic paradigms and western transformations.Deborah L. Black - 2000 - Topoi 19 (1):59-75.
  49. Why Cannot an Effect Precede its Cause.Max Black - 1955 - Analysis 16 (3):49-58.
  50.  4
    Formal Contributions to the Theory of Public Choice: The Unpublished Works of Duncan Black.Duncan Black - 1996 - Springer.
    Duncan Black made a significant contribution to the development of public choice theory during his lifetime. Upon his death it became apparent that much of his scholarship and critique of economics was never published. Formal Contributions to the Theory of Public Choice is a collection of Duncan Black's unpublished works, representing his continuing contribution to economics and political science. It provides an insight into Black's intellectual endeavors and introduces some new ideas and extensions of earlier work.
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