The Proximity of Other Skins: Ethical Intimacy in Global Cinema
Autor Celine Parreñas Shimizuen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 ian 2020
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Paperback (1) | 228.92 lei 10-16 zile | |
Oxford University Press – 24 ian 2020 | 228.92 lei 10-16 zile | |
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Oxford University Press – 24 ian 2020 | 574.41 lei 31-37 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190865863
ISBN-10: 0190865865
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 9 film stills
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190865865
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 9 film stills
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In The Proximity of Other Skins, Celine Parreñas Shimizu offers a powerful model of ethical intimacy that demands a global understanding of cinema, sexuality, and otherness. Through a series of insightful and passionate readings, she challenges us to see movies -- and ourselves -- with greater rigor and political complexity. As with her other books, I come away from this one with a finer grasp of how cinema, seen through her illuminating vision, can provoke and unsettle in the best ways.
Contemporary Asian and world cinemas are replete with narratives of self-shattering encounters with otherness. In this fascinating study, Celine Parreñas Shimizu illuminates the fraught intimacies conjured by the movies, revealing their ethico-political insights into some of our era's murkiest dilemmas.
This thought-provoking book examines efforts by contemporary filmmakers from the Philippines, Korea, and elsewhere to portray inequality within scenes of intimacy in ways designed to make viewers uncomfortable. Her highly original study grapples impressively with the challenges of forging empathy, compassion, and understanding across borders, and offers fresh insight into how film can illuminate the dynamics of power, privilege, and pleasure in global contexts.
Dr. Shimizu's work has always been attuned to the potential of cinema to not only represent the social, but produce it. The Proximity of Other Skins is no exception and constitutes a profound and necessary continuation of her ongoing feminist inquiry. In this timely and vital text, Shimizu ambitions beyond the sensorial gridlock of the Western cinematic apparatus toward another way of seeing and living under the neocolonial visual regime.
Contemporary Asian and world cinemas are replete with narratives of self-shattering encounters with otherness. In this fascinating study, Celine Parreñas Shimizu illuminates the fraught intimacies conjured by the movies, revealing their ethico-political insights into some of our era's murkiest dilemmas.
This thought-provoking book examines efforts by contemporary filmmakers from the Philippines, Korea, and elsewhere to portray inequality within scenes of intimacy in ways designed to make viewers uncomfortable. Her highly original study grapples impressively with the challenges of forging empathy, compassion, and understanding across borders, and offers fresh insight into how film can illuminate the dynamics of power, privilege, and pleasure in global contexts.
Dr. Shimizu's work has always been attuned to the potential of cinema to not only represent the social, but produce it. The Proximity of Other Skins is no exception and constitutes a profound and necessary continuation of her ongoing feminist inquiry. In this timely and vital text, Shimizu ambitions beyond the sensorial gridlock of the Western cinematic apparatus toward another way of seeing and living under the neocolonial visual regime.
Notă biografică
Professor Celine Parreñas Shimizu is Director of the School of Cinema at San Francisco State University. She is the author of The Hypersexuality of Race (2007), Straitjacket Sexualities (2012) and co-editor of The Feminist Porn Book (2013) and The Unwatchability of Whiteness, a special issue of Asian Diasporas and Visual Cultures of the Americas (2018). Her films include The Celine Archive (2019), The Fact of Asian Women (2004) and Birthright: Mothering Across Difference (2009). She has written numerous peer-reviewed articles in the top journals in the fields of cinema, performance, ethnic, feminist, sexuality studies and transnational popular culture in Asia and Asian America including Cinema Journal, Concentric, Film Quarterly, Frontiers, Journal of Asian American Studies, positions, Sexualities, Signs, Theater Journal, and Yale Journal of Law and Feminism.