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On the Figure in General and the Body in Particular : Figurative Invention in...

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Item specifics

Condition
Brand New: A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See all condition definitionsopens in a new window or tab
Book Title
On the Figure in General and the Body in Particular : Figurative
ISBN
9781839987809
Subject Area
Art, Performing Arts
Publication Name
On the Figure in General and the Body in Particular: : Figurative Invention in Cinema
Publisher
Anthem Press
Item Length
9 in
Subject
Film / General, Film / History & Criticism, Film & Video
Publication Year
2023
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1 in
Author
Nicole Brenez
Item Weight
16 Oz
Item Width
6 in
Number of Pages
260 Pages

About this product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Anthem Press
ISBN-10
1839987804
ISBN-13
9781839987809
eBay Product ID (ePID)
6057299029

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
260 Pages
Publication Name
On the Figure in General and the Body in Particular: : Figurative Invention in Cinema
Language
English
Subject
Film / General, Film / History & Criticism, Film & Video
Publication Year
2023
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Art, Performing Arts
Author
Nicole Brenez
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1 in
Item Weight
16 Oz
Item Length
9 in
Item Width
6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
LCCN
2023-933202
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"This is the most valuable volume by a French cinephile in English to have appeared since the translations of André Bazin and Serge Daney--a book that I believe filmgoers will still be learning from half a century from now. Brenez's originality is as stupefying as her erudition." --Jonathan Rosenbaum, American film critic, USA.
Dewey Decimal
791.43612
Table Of Content
Introduction; Part 1: Figurative Economies, 1. Why Must the Dead Be Killed?:Observations on John Woo, 2. Capitalism: Jack Smith, 3. "Unusual Approach to Bodies": Robert Bresson with Jean Eustache, Philippe Garrel, and Monte Hellman, 4. Sketch/Skip/Excessive Synthesis: Jacques Tourneur's Cat People, Dario Argento's Suspiria, John McTiernan's Predator; Part 2: Adventures of the Classical Body in Modern Cinema, 1. S.M. Eisenstein, Bella Figura, and Formal Deflagration, 2. Anti-Bodies: Instances of the Classical Body in the Work of Jean Genet, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and Gus Van Sant, 3. Short-Circuit: Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate; Part 3: New Abstractions in Figurative Invention, 1. The Contemporary Character, 2. The Being According to the Image: Orson Welles's Citizen Kane, 3. "'Cause it sounds more French": On a Secondary Character in Maurice Pialat's Police, 4. Thefts: Robert Bresson's Pickpocket; Part 4: Summonses - Figures of the Actor, 1. The Actor as Affective Citizen: Fassbinder's Beware of a Holy Whore, 2. Lassie, Unfaithful to Dogs: Fred M. Wilcox's Lassie Come Home, 3. "Die for Mr. Jensen": John Cassavetes's A Woman Under the Influence, 4. John Woo by John Woo: The Take and the Shot; Part 5: Image Circuits, 1. Travolta Himself: Dance and the Circulation of Images - Fantasy, Phantasm, and Phantasmata, 2. Thirst: Barbara Loden's Wanda, 3. The Visual Study: The Forces of a Cinematic Form - Al Razutis, Ken Jacobs, Brian De Palma, 4. The First Shot: Philippe Garrel's Liberté, la nuit, 5. Anti-Oedipus: John Woo's Heroes Shed No Tears; Part 6: Theoretical Invention, 1. "As You Are": Representation and Figuration - Questions of Terminology in the Work of Barthes, Eisenstein, Benjamin, and Epstein, 2. The Physics of Cinema: Introduction to the Literary and Filmic Oeuvre of Paul Sharits, 3. In the Meantime: Kirk Tougas' The Politics of Perception, 4. Epilogue: The Accident; Bibliography; Index
Synopsis
Films fill our imagination with figures, figurines, and talismans. They ceaselessly rework the same archetypes and invent troubling prototypes - especially when they establish a deeper relationship to reality. How do we understand these presences that are both so characteristic and so diverse in cinema? How does film deal with bodies, movements, and gestures? Why are we so drawn to these shadows, silhouettes, and hypothetical beings? What organizes the figurative values at work in a film? How do cinematic creatures circulate from film to film and image to image? How does film articulate the links between the abstract and figurative? Is it possible to write a history of figurative forms? Starting from films themselves and works that are both classical (Sergei Eisenstein, Roberto Rossellini, Orson Welles) and contemporary (Abel Ferrara, Brian DePalma, Patricia Mazuy), celebrated (Robert Bresson, John Cassavetes, Ken Jacobs, Paul Sharits) and overlooked (Al Razutis, Jean Genet, Monte Hellman, and John Travolta), from auteurs as well as aesthetic questions (representations of dance, the naked body, character development...), the essays in this volume, most available for the first in English, aim to open a field that has been neglected by analysis, while also suggesting the tools necessary to understanding figurative phenomena specific to cinema., In this selection of essays written for a variety of publications and platforms throughout the 1990s (essays, program notes, conferences), Nicole Brenez sets out and applies the tenets of what she dubs the "figurative analysis" of cinema. As the title suggests, her two main interests could broadly be summarized as the "figure" (in general) and the "body" (in particular). An actor performing on screen is, of course, a body, but Brenez goes beyond psychological or purely dramatic considerations, studying how formal elements such as framing, lighting, and editing determine what a body is and an audience's perception of it as well as how cinematic devices can be used to create new bodies - as in the science fiction films of the 1990s that posit hybrid, post-human forms. At the same time, a body can also be a collective of individuals or even themes and motifs brought together via cinematic means. The term "figure" also has a broad and rich meaning in Brenez's work, informing concepts such as "figural analysis," "figural economy," "figurative invention," or pure "figuration." While glimpses of these concepts have appeared in scattered translations over the years, this collection represents the first comprehensive and expansive selection of her writings on cinema in English. Brenez is interested in the myriad of shapes that figures take in film: shadows, silhouettes, and contours, but also themes and motifs, and how these are visually and aurally manifested. She is especially interested in the ways in which an individual film produces these figures or figurative constellations. Laying out a methodology in the book's introduction (a letter to John Ford biographer Tag Gallagher), Brenez goes on to analyze and interpret the myriad of figures found in movies by filmmakers ranging from John Woo to Paul Sharits as well as classics by Orson Welles and Sergei Eisenstein. At once rigorous and open, the originality of the films Brenez studies and her very stimulating intuitions and connections, has produced one of the major studies of cinema of the late 20th century., A collection of wide-ranging essays written throughout the 1990s, On the Body in General and the Figure in Particular: Figurative Invention in Cinema covers an array of genres and styles to propose an original method of cinematic analysis and interpretation foregrounding film's formal and plastic qualities in all their multifaceted materiality and aesthetics. Brenez reconsiders what a body on film can be and what constitutes a figure in cinema.
LC Classification Number
PN1995.9.R3

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