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- Wiley
More About This Title Thinking Through Cinema: Film as Philosophy
- English
English
- A new text for the growing field of philosophy of film, engaging with a variety of questions concerning the relationship between film and art, aesthetics and philosophy.
- Explores a wide variety of forms and periods of film, such as the avant-garde, continental film and popular American cinema, to present diverse answers to this question.
- Draws on a range of films, from the works of Hitchcock to Mission: Impossible and Being John Malkovich.
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English
Thomas E. Wartenberg is Chair of the Philosophy Department at Mount Holyoke College, where he also teaches in the Film Studies Program. He is the author of Unlikely Couples: Movie Romance as Social Criticism (Westview Press, 1999) and The Forms of Power: From Domination to Transformation (Temple University Press, 1990), the editor of The Nature of Art (Wadsworth Publishing, 2001), and the co-editor of Philosophy and Film (Routledge, 1995)and The Philosophy of Film: Introductory Text and Readings (Blackwell, 2005).
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English
Murray Smith and Thomas E. Wartenberg - Introduction.
I. The Very Idea of Film as Philosophy.
Paisley Livingston - These on Cinema as Philosophy.
Thomas E. Wartenberg - Beyond mere Illustration: How Films Can Be Philosophy.
Murray Smith - Film Art, Argument, and Ambiguity.
II. Popular American Film: Entertainment and Enlightenment.
Richard Allen - Hitchcock and Cavell.
Lester H. Hunt The Paradox of the Unknown Lover: A Reading of Letter from an Unknown Woman.
Dan Flory - Spike Lee and the Sympathetic Racist.'.
George Wilson - Transparency and Twist in Narrative Fiction Film.
Stephen Mulhall - The Impersonation of Personality: Film as Philosophy in Mission: Impossible.
Daniel Shaw - On being Philosophical and Being John Malkovich.
Christopher Grau - eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and the Morality of Memory.
III: Continental Philosophy, Continental Film.
Andras Balint Kovacs Sartre, the Philosophy of Nothingness, and the Modern Melodrama.
Paul C. Santilli - Cinema and Subjectivity in Krzysztof Kieslowski.
Katherine Ince - Is Sexy Comedy or Tragedy? Directing Desire adn Female Auteurship in the Cinema of Catherine Breillat.
IV: Films as "THEORY": The Avant -Garde.
Jinhee Choi Apperception on Display: Structural Films and Philosophy.
Noel Carroll philosophizing Through the Moving Image: The case of Serene Velocity.
Trevor Ponech - The Substance of Cinema.
Whitney Davis - The World Rewound: Peter Forgacs's Wittgenstein Tractatus.
Contributors.
Selected Bibliography.
Index.