Bültmann & Gerriets
New Takes on Film and Imagination
Paragraph, Volume 43, Issue 3
von Sarah Cooper
Verlag: Edinburgh University Press
Reihe: Paragraph Special Issues
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-4744-7760-4
Erschienen am 01.12.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 231 mm [H] x 155 mm [B] x 8 mm [T]
Gewicht: 340 Gramm
Umfang: 128 Seiten

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Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung

Brings together an international range of film scholars whose current research engages with contrasting theoretical and philosophical approaches to imagination.
In contemporary film theory, cognitivist specialists have demonstrated the most sustained interest in imagination, pioneering an earlier wave of scholarship on this topic, principally with reference to spectatorship. In the 1990s, investigations into identification and mental simulation on the part of spectators (Gregory Currie) and the theorization of viewers as imaginative agents (Murray Smith) spearheaded just some of the studies of imagining as a cognitive process, which took as their principal object of analysis mainstream cinema. This volume acknowledges the inspiration of earlier cognitivist accounts and is not conceived as a break with the old. It does seek, though, to explore questions that were not covered in that earlier research and thereby further cognitive enquiry, as well as open consideration of film and imagination to other theories and philosophies, in addition to a broader selection of films.
Key Features
. Features discussion of theoretical and philosophical explorations of imagination as they relate to questions of spectatorship, film form, and cinematographic time.
. Ranging widely in historical and geographical purview, and intersecting with political and especially ethical concerns where relevant.
. Includes solely theoretical pieces in addition to close analyses of particular films, with examples from documentary through art house and experimental to narrative cinema.
. The contributors have contrasting takes on the relation between film and imagination, but all are united in recognizing its richness as a topic for current and future research.
Sarah Cooper is Professor of Film Studies at King's College London. Her books include Selfless Cinema?: Ethics and French Documentary (Oxford: Legenda, 2006); Chris Marker (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2008); The Soul of Film Theory (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013); and Film and the Imagined Image (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, forthcoming 2019).



New Takes on Film and Imagination
Sarah Cooper

Mise en Esprit: One-Character Films and the Evocation of Sensory Imagination
Julian Hanich

The Auditory Imagination and the Polyphony of Listening: A Study of Chantal Akerman's South (1999)
Albertine Fox

Imagining Cinema: 'Cinempathy' and the Embodied Imagination
Robert Sinnerbrink

Imitation of Life: Cinema and the Moral Imagination
Jane Stadler

Perceptual-Imaginative Space and the Beautiful Ecologies of Rose Lowder's Bouquets
Sarah Cooper

'The Cruel Radiance of What Is': Empathy, Imagination and Estrangement in Johan van der Keuken's Face Value and Herman Slobbe
Abraham Geil

Sleeping away the Factory, Healing with Time: Gaston Bachelard, the Poetic Imagination and Testrol és lélekrol/On Body and Soul (2017)
Saige Walton

Cinematic Imaging and Imagining through the Lens of Buddhism
Victor Fan



Sarah Cooper is Professor of Film Studies at King's College London. Her books include The Soul of Film Theory (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), Chris Marker (Manchester University Press, 2008), and Selfless Cinema? Ethics and French Documentary (2006).

Sarah Cooper is Professor of Film Studies at King's College London. Her books include Selfless Cinema? Ethics and French Documentary (Legenda, 2006); Chris Marker (Manchester University Press, 2008); The Soul of Film Theory (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2013); and Film and the Imagined Image (Edinburgh University Press, 2019). Her current research is on flowers and film.


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