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E-raamat: Anecdotal Evidence: Ecocritiqe from Hollywood to the Mass Image

(Professor of Screen Studies, University of Melbourne, Australia)
  • Formaat: 400 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190065744
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  • Formaat: 400 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190065744
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Ecocritique is a practice of radical questioning, as essential to the critical armoury as feminism and postcolonialism have become. Like them, it extends beyond judgements about texts with clear ecological themes, demonstrating the significance of ecocriticism for any advanced understanding of cultural forms. Anecdotal method is ecocritical because it focuses on encounters, concentrated moments of crisis when social ordering and ecological forces clash. The anecdote's power to produce events, meanings and history forms a methodological entry to aesthetic politics. Anecdotal Evidence provides an outline of the need for and principles of anecdotal method; a case study of eco-critical themes in Hollywood films shaped by the Global Financial Crisis; and a confrontation with mass image databases of social and streaming media that due to their scale and organisation appear at first immune to anecdotal method. Only because the environment has a history is it possible to intervene environmentally. Because we continually misrecognise the historical production of environments, the first task of ecocritique is to bring our formative concept of ecology into crisis. Its final task will be to achieve the good life for everything connected by the historical implication of humans in ecology, and ecology in humans. No politics can be undertaken in our times except through media: ecocritical humanities have a key role in rethinking ecopolitics in the 21st century.

Arvustused

Anecdotal Evidence offers an impressive, insightful, and unquestionably inspiring set of film critiques that convincingly demonstrates the ecocritical potential of the concept of the anecdote. * Film Philosophy * As one of ecomedia's long-standing leading scholars, Cubitt's Anecdotal Evidence challenges its readers to break from our entrenched and unsustainable current path dependencies. The point is not to imagine some better but endlessly deferred future but to recover what is possible in the present. * Critical Inquiry *

Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(10)
Section 1 Ecocritique and Anecdote
11(38)
Ecocritique
11(2)
Anecdote
13(3)
Trust
16(2)
Uniqueness
18(5)
Appearance
23(5)
Encounter and Obligation
28(3)
Multiple Anecdotes
31(4)
The Popular
35(4)
Archive and Commons
39(3)
Against Connectivity
42(7)
Section 2 Ecocritique, Popular Cinema, and the Global Financial Crisis
49(172)
2.1 Rango and Appearance
51(20)
Animation Ethics
51(2)
Property and Presentation
53(4)
Picnolepsia
57(2)
Water
59(3)
Proliferation of Forms
62(4)
Rango as Anecdote
66(5)
2.2 A Glitch in Time: Deja Vu
71(24)
Perfect Communication, and Noise
71(2)
Glitching
73(4)
Orpheus, or Contingency
77(4)
Slavery and Latency
81(2)
The Einstein-Rosen Bridge
83(4)
Continuity and Discontinuity
87(8)
2.3 Becoming Human: Iron Man 2
95(22)
A Man Alone
95(1)
Genesis of Data Visualisation
96(7)
Labour Power
103(5)
Anthropology of Iron Man
108(4)
The Master-Slave Dialectic
112(5)
2.4 Otherwise than Human: Oblivion
117(22)
Supply Chains and Ambiguity
117(2)
Infidelity
119(4)
Nonidentity and the Model
123(3)
Individuality and Identity
126(2)
Recognition and Repetition
128(3)
Debt
131(2)
Constituent Power
133(6)
2.5 The Non-identical World: Source Code
139(24)
The Information Environment
139(2)
Irreality
141(4)
A History of Instincts
145(4)
The Tribulations of Utopia
149(4)
How to Code a Perfect Day
153(3)
Chicago
156(7)
2.6 Those Dying Generations: No Country for Old Men
163(18)
The Border
163(2)
Hudspeth County 1909
165(4)
Anton Chigurh Past and Future
169(4)
Evil and Displacement
173(2)
Landscape
175(6)
2.7 Hope in Children of Men and Serenity
181(20)
Utopia, Again
181(4)
Nihilism and Waste
185(2)
The Dialectics of the Sublime
187(6)
Fetish
193(3)
Zombi
196(5)
2.8 Posthumous Media: The Voyager Animations
201(20)
Experiment
201(3)
Astral Body
204(4)
Infinities
208(2)
Redemption
210(4)
Subjunctive
214(7)
Section 3 Ecocritique, Anecdote, and the Mass Image
221(48)
Part 1 Making the Mass Image
223(26)
The Mass Image
223(6)
Critique of Connectivity
229(2)
Genealogy of the Mass Image
231(9)
Network Subjectivity and the Logistics of Behaviour
240(6)
Chronoclasm
246(3)
Part 2 Remaking the Mass Image
249(20)
Noise
249(4)
After Connectivity
253(3)
Natural Language and the Encyclopedia
256(9)
What Do Databases Want?
265(4)
References 269(20)
Index 289
Sean Cubitt is Professor of Screen Studies at the University of Melbourne. His publications include The Cinema Effect (2004), EcoMedia (2005), The Practice of Light (2014), and Finite Media: Environmental Implications of Digital Technologies (2017). He is a co-editor of The Ecocinema Reader: Theory and Practice (2012) and of Ecomedia: Key Issues (2015). A member of the editorial boards of leading journals arts including Screen, Cultural Politics, Animation and MIRAJ: The Moving Image Review and Art Journal, he is series editor for Leonardo Books.