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Comparative Cinema: Late and Last Things in Literature and Film

Autor Paul Coates
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 mai 2022
This book comprises what may be called exercises in ‘comparative cinema’. Its focus on endings, near-endings and ‘late style’ is connected with the author’s argument that comparative criticism itself may constitute an endgame of criticism, arising at the moment at which societies or individuals relinquish primary adherence to one tradition or medium. The comparisons embrace different works and artistic media and primarily concern works of literature and film, though they also consider issues raised by the interrelationship of language and moving and still images, as well as inter- and intra-textuality. The works probed most fully are ones by Theo Angelopoulos, Ingmar Bergman, Harun Farocki, Theodor Fontane, Henry James, Krzysztof Kieślowski, Chang-dong Lee, Roman Polański, Thomas Pynchon, and Paul Schrader, while the key recurrent motifs are those of dusk, the horizon, the labyrinth, and the ruin.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030690465
ISBN-10: 3030690466
Pagini: 243
Ilustrații: XIV, 243 p. 20 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2021
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Preface: what flies at dusk.- Part 1 - Film and Film: Spirituality and comparative cinema.- Chapter 1 - On the cinéphilia of Paul Schrader’s First Reformed.- Chapter 2 - Elective Affinities of Krzysztof Kieślowski’s Red: Curzio Malaparte and Naomi Kawase.- Part 2 - ‘I would like to escape this story’: creative betrayal.-Chapter 3 - Some thoughts on adaptation.- Chapter 4 - Bergman and Sophocles; Polański and Euripides.- Chapter 5 - Persona in the mirror of literature.- Chapter 6 - Ghosts of dramas past.- Chapter 7 - The pre-modernist moment: ‘I would like to escape this story’.- Chapter 8 - System and structure in The Crying of Lot 49 and How one sees.- Part 3 - Imagination and disaster.- Chapter 9 - Imagination and disaster: The Sweet Hereafter of Russell Banks and Atom Egoyan.-Chapter 10  - Modernist metaphors: love and fire in Lee Chang-Dong’s Burning.- Chapter 11 - Ruins in literature and film.

Notă biografică

Paul Coates is an Emeritus Professor in the Film Studies Programme at Western University, Canada. He also taught at McGill, Georgia and Aberdeen. His books include studies of the novel, Symbolist poetry, Polish and German cinema, colour, the double, and the face in film.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book comprises what may be called exercises in ‘comparative cinema’. Its focus on endings, near-endings and ‘late style’ is connected with the author’s argument that comparative criticism itself may constitute an endgame of criticism, arising at the moment at which societies or individuals relinquish primary adherence to one tradition or medium. The comparisons embrace different works and artistic media and primarily concern works of literature and film, though they also consider issues raised by the interrelationship of language and moving and still images, as well as inter- and intra-textuality. The works probed most fully are ones by Theo Angelopoulos, Ingmar Bergman, Harun Farocki, Theodor Fontane, Henry James, Krzysztof Kieślowski, Chang-dong Lee, Roman Polański, Thomas Pynchon, and Paul Schrader, while the key recurrent motifs are those of dusk, the horizon, the labyrinth, and the ruin.

Caracteristici

Transplants into Film Studies the protocols and procedures of Comparative Literature Offers an original theory of the relationship between comparatism and the sense of ending, with particular reference to theories of modernism, abstraction, quotation and randomization Theorizes the emergence of cinema as a ‘late thing’ in the histories of society, the mind, the arts and the senses Presents a wide international range of literary and filmic texts, both occidental and oriental, that raise the question of ending in various ways Affords a uniquely dialectical consideration of the relationship between intertextuality, intratextuality and intermediality Provides an original contribution to adaptation studies that has relevance to other fields also, particularly aesthetics and philosophy Maps the relationship between texts’ endings or endlessness, and figures of escape, the labyrinth, the ruin, the double, and dusk