The most powerful films have an afterlife. Their sensory appeal and their capacity to elicit involvement in story, character and conflict reaches beyond the screen to subtly reframe the way spectators view ethical issues and agents within the narrative, and in the world outside the cinema. Pulling Focus: Intersubjective Experience and Narrative Film questions how cinematic narratives relate to and affect ethical life. Extending Martha Nussbaum and Wayne Booth's work on moral philosophy and literature to consider cinema, Dr. Stadler shows that film spectatorship can be understood as a model for ethical attention that engages the audience in an affective relationship with characters and their values. Building on Vivian Sobchack's Address of the Eye and Carnal Thoughts, she uses a phenomenological approach to analyse ethical dimensions of film extending beyond narrative content, arguing that the camera describes experience and views screen characters with an evaluative form of perception: an ethical gaze in which spectators participate. Films discussed include Dead Man Walking, Lost Highway, Batman Begins, Nil By Mouth, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Autorentext
Jane Stadler is Senior Lecturer in Film and Television at the School of English, Media Studies, and Art History at the University of Queensland. She is co-editor of Pockets of Change (with Tricia Hopton, Adam Atkinson, and Peta Mitchell, 2011), co-author of Media and Society (with Michael O'Shaughnessy, 2012) and Screen Media (with Kelly McWilliam, 2009), and has published journal articles on phenomenology, ethics, aesthetics, identity, and screen landscapes.
Inhalt
Chapter 1: Ethics in Narrative Form and Content
Chapter 2: A Phenomenological Approach to the Ethics of Film
Chapter 3: Losing the Plot: Narrative Structure and Ethical Identity
Chapter 4: Under the Influence: Vice, Violence and Villainy
Chapter 5: Resistance and Responsiveness: Emotion and Character Engagement
Chapter 6: Imagination: Inner Sight and Silent Voices
Chapter 7: Seeing in the Dark: Cinema, Ethics, and Alternative Engagement
Titel
Pulling Focus
Untertitel
Intersubjective Experience, Narrative Film, and Ethics
Autor
EAN
9781441186492
Format
PDF
Hersteller
Genre
Veröffentlichung
15.09.2008
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
2.36 MB
Anzahl Seiten
288
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