Film-Philosophy
Not a member yet
    607 research outputs found

    Joe McElhaney, ed. (2009) Vincente Minnelli: The Art of Entertainment

    No full text

    Karen Ward Mahar (2008) Women Filmmakers in Early Hollywood

    No full text

    Michael J. Shapiro (2009) Cinematic Geopolitics

    No full text

    Dreams Rise in Darkness: The White Magic of Cinema

    No full text
    This paper considers Baudrillard’s thought in relation to cinema. It begins with a discussion of the way in which Baudrillard’s work typically invokes film and of the consequent paucity of Baudrillardian studies of cinema, making reference to the literature on Blade Runner and The Matrix. It proceeds to excavate a fuller account of Baudrillard’s conception of cinema, drawing, initially, on Baudrillard’s use of the 1926 German silent film, The Student of Prague, in his conclusion to The Consumer Society. At first blush, this leads to a somewhat dismissive assessment of film qua simulation. Having reached the point where the importance of seduction to Baudrillard’s conception of cinema makes itself evident, however, the paper continues to evoke the other side of Baudrillard’s thought, where additional reference to his remarks on photography allows greater purchase on his understanding of cinema

    The ‘ABCs’ of B, Or: To Be and Not to Be B

    No full text
    Abstract Neede

    Mark Rowlands (2008) Fame

    No full text

    Mark T. Conrad, ed. (2009) The Philosophy of Neo-Noir

    No full text

    0

    full texts

    607

    metadata records
    Updated in last 30 days.
    Film-Philosophy
    Access Repository Dashboard
    Do you manage Open Research Online? Become a CORE Member to access insider analytics, issue reports and manage access to outputs from your repository in the CORE Repository Dashboard! 👇