Results for 'European Cinema'

980 found
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  1.  11
    Religion in Contemporary European Cinema: The Postsecular Constellation.Costica Bradatan & Camil Ungureanu - 2014 - Routledge.
    The religious landscape in Europe is changing dramatically. While the authority of institutional religion has weakened, a growing number of people now desire individualized religious and spiritual experiences, finding the self-complacency of secularism unfulfilling. The "crisis of religion" is itself a form of religious life. A sense of complex, subterraneous interaction between religious, heterodox, secular and atheistic experiences has thus emerged, which makes the phenomenon all the more fascinating to study, and this is what Religion in Contemporary European (...) does. The book explores the mutual influences, structural analogies, shared dilemmas, as well as the historical roots of such a "post-secular constellation" as seen through the lens of European cinema. Bringing together scholars from film theory and political science, ethics and philosophy of religion, philosophy of film and theology, this volume casts new light on the relationship between the religious and secular experience after the death of the death of God. (shrink)
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  2. European Cinema and Continental Philosophy: Film as Thought Experiment, by Thomas Elsaesser. [REVIEW]Ekin Erkan - 2019 - Alphaville 18:232–238.
    Thomas Elsaesser’s recent scholarship has examined the “mind-game film”, a phenomenon in Hollywood that is broadly characterised by multi-platform storytelling, paratextual narrative feedback loops, nonlinear storytelling, and unreliable character perspectives. While “mind-game” or “puzzle” films have become a contentious subject amongst post-cinema scholars concerned with Hollywood storytelling, what is to be said of contemporary European independent cinema? Elsaesser’s timely publication, European Cinema and Continental Philosophy, examines an amalgam of politically inclined European auteurs to resolve (...)
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  3.  22
    Thomas Elsaesser (2019) European Cinema and Continental Philosophy: Film As Thought Experiment.Michelle Devereaux - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (3):366-370.
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  4.  56
    John Orr (2014) The Demons of Modernity: Ingmar Bergman and European Cinema.Thorsten Botz-Bornstein - 2015 - Film-Philosophy 19 (1).
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  5.  13
    (1 other version)Gendered spaces for survival: Citizens and aliens in contemporary European cinema.A. De Pascalis Ilaria - 2017 - Latest Issue of Empedocles European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 8 (1):7-22.
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  6.  24
    Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli (2017) Mythopoetic Cinema: On the Ruins of European Cinema.James Harvey - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):241-244.
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  7.  18
    Andrea Sabbadini, ed. (2003) The Couch and the Silver Screen: Psychoanalytic Reflections on European Cinema.Benedicte Coste - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (3):86-93.
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  8.  9
    Book review: MARY P. WOOD, Contemporary European Cinema. London: Hodder Arnold, 2007, xxiv + 200 pp., paperback, £16.99. [REVIEW]Esmat Babaii - 2009 - Discourse and Communication 3 (3):321-323.
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  9.  51
    European Co-production Funds and Latin American Cinema: Processes of Othering and Bourgeois Cinephilia in Claudia Llosa’s La teta asustada.Deborah Shaw - 2015 - Diogenes 62 (1):88-99.
    Latin American women’s filmmaking has an unprecedented international profile thanks to the films of the Peruvian director Claudia Llosa, and the Argentine directors Lucía Puenzo and Lucrecia Martel. What is frequently unacknowledged when discussing the work of these award-winning filmmakers is the fact that all of their films are co-productions with Europe, and that programmes such as Cinéfondation, a programme aligned with the Cannes film festival, the Hubert Bals Fund, the World Cinema Fund and Ibermedia have been instrumental in (...)
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  10.  7
    Reframing the European other: identity and belonging in contemporary French and German cinema.Kamil Jan Zapaśnik - 2024 - New York: Peter Lang Publishing.
    During the last three decades, Europe has undergone numerous periods of economic and political instability. The process of European integration, once hailed as a beacon of a peaceful co-operation between many, if not all, European nations appears to be stagnating, giving rise to notoriously more frequent manifestations of xenophobic violence, nationalism and right-wing fundamentalism. This book evaluates the portrayal of the migrant Other in selected examples of contemporary French and German cinema from the period 1989-2020 in the (...)
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  11.  24
    European Nightmares: Horror Cinema in Europe since 1945.Ian Olney - 2014 - The European Legacy 19 (7):938-941.
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  12.  6
    Resonant bodies in contemporary European art cinema.Emilija Talijan - 2022 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    The body at close range: volume and the unlistenable in Catherine Breillat's Anatomy of Hell -- Sonic subjection: Gaspar Noé's Irreversible and the dystopian limits of the resonant body -- A stranger everywhere: the écho-monde of Tony Gatlif's Exiles -- Feedback, asynchronicity, and sonic sociabilities: Arnaud des Pallière's Adieu -- Listening at the limit: non-human noise in Lars von Trier's Antichrist -- Listening to things: Foley as "alien phenomenology" and Peter Strickland's Berberian sound studio.
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  13.  20
    Deleuze and World Cinemas by David Martin-Jones.Gerald Sim - 2019 - Substance 48 (1):102-106.
    One has the distinct feeling that Deleuze and World Cinemas was already in the works when David Martin-Jones published Deleuze: Cinema and National Identity in 2006. In that earlier study, he married Deleuze with Homi K. Bhabha to produce constructive readings of both canonical and popular films. He considers these texts to be hybrid films that display qualities of both the movement-image and time-image, two Deleuzian concepts he deploys in showing how narrative time fashions national identity in distinctive ways. (...)
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  14.  7
    The other in contemporary migrant cinema: imagining a new Europe?Guido Rings - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    Introduction -- Otherness in contemporary European cinema -- Potential and limits of a new European in Nicolas Echevarría's Cabeza de vaca -- Migrants in Europe: breaking the boundaries? -- Inspiration from abroad? cultural boundaries in Chicano cinema -- Conclusion.
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  15.  5
    Cinema and surveillance: the asymmetric gaze.Martin Blumenthal-Barby - 2024 - New York: Routledge.
    Cinema and Surveillance: The Asymmetric Gaze shows how key modern filmmakers challenge and disturb the relation between film and surveillance, medium and message. Assembling readings of films by Harun Farocki, Michael Haneke, and Fritz Lang, the book considers surveillance in such different domains as urban life, religious doctrine, and law enforcement. With surveillance present in the modern world as both a technological phenomenon and a social practice, the author shows how cinema, as a visual medium, presents highly sophisticated (...)
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  16.  21
    The Trouble with The Trouble with Men, on Masculinities in European and Hollywood Cinema, editied by Phil Powrie, Ann Davies, and Bruce Babington.Kenneth MacKinnon - 2005 - Film-Philosophy 9 (2).
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  17.  26
    Cinema and Counter-History.Marcia Landy - 2015 - Indiana University Press.
    Despite claims about the end of history and the death of cinema, visual media continue to contribute to our understanding of history and history-making. In this book, Marcia Landy argues that rethinking history and memory must take into account shifting conceptions of visual and aural technologies. With the assistance of thinkers such as Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Cinema and Counter-History examines writings and films that challenge prevailing notions of history in order to explore the philosophic, aesthetic, and (...)
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  18.  14
    Film Manifestoes and Global Cinema Cultures: A Critical Anthology.Scott MacKenzie - 2014 - University of California Press.
    Film Manifestos and Global Cinema Cultures is the first book to collect manifestoes from the global history of cinema, providing the first historical and theoretical account of the role played by film manifestos in filmmaking and film culture. Focussing equally on political and aesthetic manifestoes, Scott MacKenzie uncovers a neglected, yet nevertheless central history of the cinema, exploring a series of documents that postulate ways in which to re-imagine the cinema and, in the process, re-imagine the (...)
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  19.  12
    Slow World Cinemas' Rhizomatic Flux in Carlos Reygadas's Japón.Hui-Han Chen - 2024 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 18 (2):226-245.
    Adopting Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari's formulations of the rhizome, this article will examine a dynamic that lies between the film Japón's (Carlos Reygadas, 2002) vernacular specificities, European modernist aesthetics and cosmopolitan spectatorship. The article aims to reveal that Japón, along with other contemporary slow films from around the world, has the potential to reify a deterritorialising and reterritorialising encounter that rethinks a Eurocentric genealogical reading of world cinema and challenges a capitalist code of filmmaking.
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  20. (1 other version)Left-over Spaces: The Cinema of the Dardenne Brothers.Benoît Dillet & Tara Puri - 2013 - Film-Philosophy 17 (1):367-382.
    The object of this study is the presence and the operation of space in the films of the Dardenne brothers. In this paper, we will examine three films - Rosetta , The Child and The Silence of Lorna - and present the argument that they depict an original account of the contemporary European city as a totality (in this case an eastern Belgian steel town). The construction of the characters, their relationships, and the moral implications of their actions are (...)
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  21.  59
    Deleuze and cinema: the film concepts.Felicity Colman - 2011 - New York: Berg.
    Gilles Deleuze published two radical books on film: Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image. Engaging with a wide range of film styles, histories and theories, Deleuze's writings treat film as a new form of philosophy. This ciné-philosophy offers a startling new way of understanding the complexities of the moving image, its technical concerns and constraints as well as its psychological and political outcomes. Deleuze and Cinema presents a step-by-step guide to the key concepts behind (...)
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  22.  8
    Promised lands: cinema, geography, modernism.Sam Rohdie - 2001 - London: British Film Institute.
    This book is an innovative attempt by a leading film theorist to locate cinema--from the earliest experiments, via the work of Federico Fellini, Alfred Hitchcock, Roberto Rossellini, Orson Welles and many others, to contemporary European art cinema-- alongside philosophy, painting, geography and travel in terms of a history of modernism. The focal point of Promised Lands is a vast collection of geographical and ethnographic films and photographs made around the world, The Archives of the Planet . Based (...)
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  23.  53
    Opera, cinema, melodrama, and history: The case of Italian cinema.Marcia Landy - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (4):1597-1601.
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  24.  44
    Frontiers of Screen History: Imagining European Borders in Cinema, 1945–2010. [REVIEW]Judith Keene - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):200-201.
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  25.  50
    Inscribing Cinema: Sylviane Agacinski (2003) Time Passing: Modernity and Nostalgia.Kristi McKim - 2006 - Film-Philosophy 10 (2):67-81.
    Sylviane Agacinski, Time Passing: Modernity and Nostalgia Trans. Jody Gladding European Perspectives: A Series in Social Thought and Cultural Criticism Ed. Lawrence D. Kritzman New York: Columbia UP, 2003 ISBN 0-231-12514-3.
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  26.  35
    Mamardashvili on film: cinema as a metaphor for consciousness.Alyssa DeBlasio - 2019 - Studies in East European Thought 71 (3):217-227.
    Philosopher Merab Mamardashvili had multiple connections to the Soviet film industry, including the years he spent lecturing to cinema students in Moscow, and yet his work in this area has thus far been neglected by scholars of philosophy and cinema alike. In this article, I consider Mamardashvili’s most sustained remarks on film, including his use of the metaphor of the movie theatre and his commentary in The Aesthetics of Thinking on Vadim Abdrashitov and Aleksandr Mindadze’s The Train Stopped. (...)
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  27.  13
    Women’s cinema of trauma: Affect, movement, time.Dijana Jelača - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):335-352.
    This article analyses several notable examples of what the author calls the post-Yugoslav women’s cinema of trauma. These films made by women filmmakers challenge the standard tropes of war, as well as normative approaches to war cinema, by highlighting the intimate affective domain of experience, rather than large-scale narratives and collective emotions. The author focuses on the near-silent short and experimental works of Una Gunjak and Šejla Kamerić, and suggests that they offer insightful formal and narrative ways of (...)
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  28.  43
    Shell Shock Cinema: Weimar Culture and the Wounds of War. By Anton Kaes.Michael C. Wallo - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (4):568 - 569.
    The European Legacy, Volume 17, Issue 4, Page 568-569, July 2012.
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  29.  32
    The Cinema of Michael Haneke: Europe Utopia.Marcia Landy & Stanley Shostak - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (6):677-678.
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  30.  30
    THE CONCEPTS OF CENSORSHIP AND SAFETY IN LIBYAN CINEMA: BEFORE AND AFTER THE LIBYAN UPRISING.Abdulhamid Abuaniza - forthcoming - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion.
    This research examines the problem of censorship in the Libyan context from a historical and ideological standpoint. Libyan cinema has not gotten as much academic attention as Middle Eastern nations like Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine. In addition to providing a historical overview of Libyan cinema, this study carefully investigates the settings that influenced Libyan national cinema from the perspectives of people who work in this industry there. To learn more about the problems with censorship in Libyan (...)
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  31.  62
    Douglas Keesey (2012) Contemporary Erotic Cinema.Troy Michael Bordun - 2015 - Film-Philosophy 19 (1).
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  32.  29
    Europe and Love in Cinema.Judith Keene - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (3):349-350.
  33.  15
    The (in)visibility of violence: Jasmila Žbanić’s post-war cinema.Ilaria A. De Pascalis - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):365-380.
    The aim of the article is to discuss Jasmila Žbanić’s Esma’s Secret, On the Path and For Those Who Can Tell No Tales as a trilogy addressing the consequences of Bosnian War. The films are considered in the theoretical framework of women’s cinema as world cinema, exploring their location in relation to globalization. The article hence analyses each film’s aesthetic in light of influential feminist concepts and theories such as Rey Chow’s age of the world target, Adriana Cavarero’s (...)
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  34.  14
    Wanda Jakubowska’s Cinema of Commitment.Ewa Mazierska - 2001 - European Journal of Women's Studies 8 (2):221-238.
    The purpose of this article is to provide a general overview of the work of Wanda Jakubowska, the first Polish, female film director to gain national and international recognition. Her career spanned over 50 years, in which she directed 14 full-length feature films, thus being the longest working film director in the history of Polish cinema. She was also one of the highest profile filmmakers to join the Polish communist party after the Second World War and in subsequent years (...)
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  35.  20
    Storytelling in World Cinemas: Volume 1 – Forms.A. Robert Lauer - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (5-6):611-612.
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  36.  9
    Gender–Theatre–Cinema.Elzbieta H. Oleksy - 1999 - European Journal of Women's Studies 6 (4):501-502.
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  37.  50
    Ce qui restera du cinéma français: figures marquantes du 20e siècle.Yves Laberge - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (7):871-873.
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  38. Expressionism and Weimar Cinema.Darko Štrajn - 2023 - In Polona Tratnik (ed.), The European Avant-Garde – A Hundred Years Later. Boston: BRILL.
     
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  39.  28
    Storytelling in World Cinemas: Volume 2 – Contexts.A. Robert Lauer - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (5-6):612-614.
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  40.  17
    Women as film directors in Turkish cinema.Hulya Uğur Tanrıöver - 2017 - European Journal of Women's Studies 24 (4):321-335.
    Representations of women, or more exactly of gender, and the presence and works of women filmmakers constitute an important area of analysis for gender studies and feminist film theories. In Turkey the presence and the participation of women in the public sphere have been one of the important objectives of the Kemalist modernization project since the founding of the modern nation-state in 1923. However, despite the modernizing efforts to empower women in different spheres of life there was no woman director (...)
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  41.  25
    Musical ‘Contact Zones’ in Gurinder Chadha’s Cinema.Serena Guarracino - 2009 - European Journal of Women's Studies 16 (4):373-390.
    This article explores strategies of cultural representation in the production of Gurinder Chadha, a British director of Sikh origin. Chadha’s work is located in what Marie Louise Pratt defines as ‘contact zones’, negotiating between US, European and Indian audiences. The result is a directing style that puts together ‘East’ and ‘West’, Bollywood and Hollywood, in an in-between space that has been radically reconfigured through hybridization. This happens in particular through her use of music and soundtrack, from the documentary I’m (...)
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  42.  14
    Visualizing thought at work. Review of Alyssa DeBlasio: The Filmmaker's philosopher - Merab Mamardashvili and Russian cinema: Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2019, 203 p, $75, Hardcover: ISBN 978-1-4744-4448-4.Elisa Pontini - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (2):191-194.
    Alyssa DeBlasio’s book The Filmmaker's philosopher - Merab Mamardashvili and Russian cinema presents Merab Mamardashvili’s philosophy seen through the eyes of film directors who were directly or indirectly influenced by his lectures. With a detailed analysis of eight films, the book brings together a generation of filmmakers who translated Mamardashvili’s message into cinematic language, performing an experiment through which we might see an alternative mode of thought at work. By showing how Mamardashvili’s considerations of metaphysical, epistemological and moral nature (...)
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  43.  13
    Book review: Women’s Cinema, World Cinema: Projecting Contemporary Feminisms. [REVIEW]Dijana Jelača - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):463-466.
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  44.  79
    Loving/Thinking and the (French) New Wave: Cinema as is Philosophy.Soumitra Ghosh - 2010 - The European Legacy 15 (5):565-581.
    In recent years, there has been a resurgent interest in the philosophical dimension of cultural products—cinema, in particular. Rather than analyzing the production, dissemination and reception of particular films through literary, cultural, sociological or psychological theories, one considers film as “doing the work” of theory/philosophy. This essay argues that cinema's possibility of being/becoming philosophy will emerge only if one remains open to the inconsistencies of the cinematic text, rather than seek to posit a mythical point of origin that (...)
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  45. Film as Philosophy: Essays on Cinema After Wittgenstein and Cavell.Rupert Read & Jerry Goodenough (eds.) - 2005 - New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    A series of essays on film and philosophy whose authors - philosophers or film studies experts - write on a wide variety of films: classic Hollywood comedies, war films, Eastern European art films, science fiction, showing how film and watching it can not only illuminate philosophy but, in an important sense, be doing philosophy. The book is crowned with an interview with Wittgensteinian philosopher Stanley Cavell, discussing his interests in philosophy and in film and how they can come together.
  46.  17
    Book review: Afterimages. On Cinema, Women, and Changing Times. [REVIEW]Ilaria Antonella De Pascalis - 2021 - European Journal of Women's Studies 28 (4):559-561.
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  47.  22
    Framing Film: Cinema and the Visual Arts. [REVIEW]Arthur Shostak - 2017 - The European Legacy 22 (4):506-506.
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  48.  11
    Women’s Cinema and Transnational Europe.Veronica Pravadelli - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (4):329-334.
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  49.  15
    Book Review: Cinema and gender studies: society, identity and styles of representation in the golden age of hollywood. Veronica Pravadelli, La grande Hollywood. Stili di vita e di regia nel cinema classico americano: [The Great Hollywood] Styles of directing and lifestyles in American classical cinema, Marsilio: Venezia, 2007, 287 pp., ISBN 978-88-3179220-2. [REVIEW]Antonietta Buonauro & Paola Bono - 2010 - European Journal of Women's Studies 17 (4):431-433.
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  50.  16
    (1 other version)Politics of vision: Subjects and urban scenarios in narrative cinema.A. De Pascalis Ilaria - 2017 - Latest Issue of Empedocles European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 8 (1):3-6.
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