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E-raamat: Ovid on Screen: A Montage of Attractions

(George Mason University, Virginia)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108618472
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108618472

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This book presents the first systematic appreciation of Ovid's extensive influence on, and affinity with, modern visual culture. Some topics are directly related to Ovid; others exhibit features, characters, or themes analogous to those in his works. The book demonstrates the wide-ranging ramifications that Ovidian archetypes, especially from the Metamorphoses, have provoked in a modern artistic medium that did not exist in Ovid's time. It ranges from the earliest days of film history (Georges Méliès's discovery of screen metamorphosis) and theory (Gabriele D'Annunzio's fascination with the metamorphosis of Daphne; Sergei Eisenstein's concept of film sense) through silent films, classic sound films, commercial cinema, art-house and independent films to modernism and the C.G.I. era. Films by well-known directors, including Ingmar Bergman, Walerian Borowczyk, Jean Cocteau, Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, Fritz Lang, Max Ophüls, Alain Resnais, and various others, are analyzed in detail.

Arvustused

'The book displays the author's impressive erudition in ancient Greek and Latin literature, and also his intimate familiarity with film theory and the necessary literature.' H. M. Roisman, Choice ' Ovid on Screen: A Montage of Attractions, emerges as [ Martin Winkler's] most ambitious and wide-ranging contribution This is an engaging and also enjoyable book from which I have learned much.' James J. Clauss, Bryn Mawr Classical Review ' detailed, meticulously-researched, highly readable and erudite ' Jo-Marie Claassen, Anabases

Muu info

The first study of Ovid, especially his Metamorphoses, as inherently visual literature, explaining his pervasive importance in our visual media.
Illustrations
x
Acknowledgments xiii
Adages xvii
Fade-in: Prooemium xix
PART I THEORY AND PRACTICE
1(7)
1 Cinemetamorphosis
3(21)
1 A Working Definition
3(2)
2 Ovidianism and Cinemetamorphosis
5(5)
3 Montages of Attractions
10(4)
4 Preview of Coming Attractions
14(4)
5 Ovidianism on the Cutting-Room Floor
18(6)
2 Ovid's Film Sense and Beyond
24(1)
1 Lessons from Eisenstein
25(5)
2 Film Sense in the Metamorphoses 1: Athena and Arachne
30(12)
3 Film Sense in the Metamorphoses 2: Niobe and Her Children
42(7)
4 Epic, Painting, Film
49(4)
5 Hitchcockian Film Sense in Amores 1.5
53(7)
6 Narcissus during the Time of the Image
60(12)
7 Visual Poetry: The Nature of Texts
72(2)
8 The First Picture Shows: Ovidian Cinema in The Last World
74(4)
PART II KEY MOMENTS IN OVIDIAN FILM HISTORY
78(5)
3 D'Annunzio's Ovid and the Cinematic Impulse
83(36)
1 Icarus' Heroic Flight
83(7)
2 "Daphne's Delicate Arm"
90(16)
3 Flashback to Pre-cinema; or: Ovid, Virgil, and the Thaumatrope
106(4)
4 Early Cinema and Visual Education: A Quasi-Dannunzian Perspective
110(5)
5 D'Annunzio and the Rise of the Film Star
115(4)
4 The Labyrinth: Narrative Complexity, Deadly Mazes, and Ovid's Modernity
119(40)
1 Ovid and Labyrinthine Narratives
119(5)
2 Ovidian Technique in the Cinema
124(6)
3 An Ovidian Labyrinth: Last Year at Marienbad
130(13)
4 Deadly Labyrinths: The Shining and Malpertuis
143(7)
5 The Girl and the Monk Who Knew about Ariadne's Thread
150(4)
6 Honorable Mention: Other Labyrinths and Minotaurs
154(5)
PART III INTO NEW BODIES
159(92)
5 Effects and Essences
161(60)
1 Melies and the Discovery of Metamorphosis
162(3)
2 The Pygmalion Effect
165(17)
3 Joan Crawford's Galatea
182(2)
4 Hephaestus and Daedalus Effects
184(2)
5 Essences of Animation
186(5)
6 Visible Essences in Metamorphoses
191(1)
7 Visible Essences before CGI: Metropolis
192(7)
8 Visible Essences through CGI: Black Swan
199(3)
9 Metamorphosis and the Cinematic Uncanny
202(1)
10 Effect Transitions: Body and Statue 20
5(202)
11 The Medusa Effect
207(8)
12 Eisenstein's Variation on the Daedalus Effect
215(6)
6 The Beast in Man: Not Ovid's, but How Ovidian!
221(30)
1 Fade-In: On the Fascination of Horror
221(4)
2 "Like a Rapacious and Bloodthirsty Wolf": The Wolf Man
225(3)
3 The Simian Beast Coming Out of Hiding into Hyde
228(11)
4 The Mind Possessed: Hour of the Wolf and Persona
239(12)
PART IV LOVE, SEDUCTION, DEATH
251(88)
7 Varieties of Modernism: Orpheus and Eurydice
253(18)
1 Pre-Modern and Modern Vignettes
254(6)
2 Post-Modernism 1: Role Reversal in Vom Suchen und Finden der Liebe
260(5)
3 Post-Modernism 2: Paul Auster, Orphic Author-Filmmaker
265(6)
8 Love and Death
271(31)
1 Ovid and Ophiils; or: "By the Time You Read This Letter, 1 May Be Dead"
272(19)
2 Philemon and Baucis: From Marital Devotion to Melancholia, Mourning, Memory, and Quirky Obsession
291(11)
9 Lessons in Seduction
302(37)
1 Fade-in: Metamorphoses of Ovid
304(1)
2 Insert i: Ovid in Poland
305(2)
3 Borowczyk's The Ah of Love
307(16)
3.1 Borowczyk's Critics and the Nature of Erotic Cinema
308(4)
3.2 Ovid in Borowczyk's Rome
312(3)
3.3 Borowczyk's Leda and Pasiphae
315(2)
3.4 Borowczyk's Nadir: Ovid as Seducer
317(3)
3.5 Erotic Complexity: From Ovid to Borowczyk
320(3)
4 Eyes Wide Shut and Brains Tight Shut: How to Fail at Seduction
323(6)
5 Insert 2: Teachers of Love
329(3)
6 La rondc. Master of the Game of Love
332(4)
7 Fade-Out: Other Arts of Love
336(3)
PART V ETERNAL RETURNS
339(45)
10 Immortality: Philosophy, Cinema, Ovid
341(12)
1 The Intelligent Machinery of the Cinema
343(1)
2 Ovidian Pythagoreanism in Four Times
344(3)
3 The Wandering Image: Free of Time and Space
347(3)
4 Ovid in The Age of the Medici
350(3)
11 Ovidian Returns
353(31)
1 Orpheus' Return as Cocteau
354(9)
2 Icarus' Return: The Nature of Cinema
363(7)
3 Cinema as Benign Medusa Effect
370(2)
4 The Marvelous Returns
372(8)
5 Ovid's Dialogic Returns
380(4)
Sphragis: End Credits 384(7)
Bibliography 391(47)
Passages of Ovid's Works 438(2)
General Index 440
Martin M. Winkler is University Professor and Professor of Classics at George Mason University, Virginia. His publications include The Persona in Three Satires of Juvenal (1983), Der lateinische Eulenspiegel des Ioannes Nemius (1995), Cinema and Classical Texts: Apollo's New Light (Cambridge, 2009), The Roman Salute: Cinema, History, Ideology (2009), Arminius the Liberator: Myth and Ideology (2015), and Classical Literature on Screen: Affinities of Imagination (Cambridge, 2017). He has edited the Penguin Classics anthology Juvenal in English (2001) and the essay collections Classics and Cinema (1991), Classical Myth and Culture in the Cinema (2001), Gladiator: Film and History (2004), Troy: From Homer's 'Iliad' to Hollywood Epic (2006), Spartacus: Film and History (2007), The Fall of the Roman Empire: Film and History (2009), and Return to Troy: New Essays on the Hollywood Epic (2015).