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Perplexing Plots: Popular Storytelling and the Poetics of Murder [Pehme köide]

(Observations On Film Art)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 512 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, 93 b&w film stills
  • Sari: Film and Culture Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jan-2023
  • Kirjastus: Columbia University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0231206593
  • ISBN-13: 9780231206594
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 512 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, 93 b&w film stills
  • Sari: Film and Culture Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jan-2023
  • Kirjastus: Columbia University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0231206593
  • ISBN-13: 9780231206594
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Narrative innovation is often thought to be the domain of the avant-garde or the experimental. However, manipulations of viewpoint and timelines and other unconventional techniques, have been part of popular American culture and storytelling since at least the 1940s. How did different forms and styles once regarded as "difficult," become mainstream and familiar to audiences? As David Bordwell demonstrates in Perplexing Plots, popular narratives have balanced innovation and convention to develop its own experimental impulses that both familiarize and surprise the viewer or readers. Bordwell argues that thrillers and detective tales, in particular, have been a major way in which popular culture allowed ambitious storytellers to experiment with narrative. They became a training ground for audiences' development of skills in understanding and enjoying complex fictions. Bordwell traces this history through the works and film adaptations of writers such as Patricia Highsmith, Erle Stanley Gardner, Rex Stout, and Richard Stark. While he focuses on the 1940s as a period when innovative storytelling began to become a permanent feature in popular culture, he also looks back to techniques from over more than a century. He also considers how these techniques have shaped the work of filmmakers from the 1940s on. Examining novels, plays, films, and radio drama. Bordwell shows how the mystery-based plot, usually hinging on a murder, and its variants have enlarged the techniques available to authors and the skill sets of audiences"--

David Bordwell reveals how crime fiction, plays, and films made unconventional narrative mainstream. A sweeping, kaleidoscopic account written in a lively, conversational style, Perplexing Plots offers an ambitious new understanding of how popular culture has evolved over the past century.

Narrative innovation is typically seen as the domain of the avant-garde. However, techniques such as nonlinear timelines, multiple points of view, and unreliable narration have long been part of American popular culture. How did forms and styles once regarded as “difficult” become familiar to audiences?

In Perplexing Plots, David Bordwell reveals how crime fiction, plays, and films made unconventional narrative mainstream. He shows that since the nineteenth century, detective stories and suspense thrillers have allowed ambitious storytellers to experiment with narrative. Tales of crime and mystery became a training ground where audiences learned to appreciate artifice. These genres demand a sophisticated awareness of storytelling conventions: they play games with narrative form and toy with audience expectations. Bordwell examines how writers and directors have pushed, pulled, and collaborated with their audiences to change popular storytelling. He explores the plot engineering of figures such as Raymond Chandler, Agatha Christie, Dashiell Hammett, Patricia Highsmith, Alfred Hitchcock, Dorothy Sayers, and Quentin Tarantino, and traces how mainstream storytellers and modernist experimenters influenced one another’s work. A sweeping, kaleidoscopic account written in a lively, conversational style, Perplexing Plots offers an ambitious new understanding of how movies, literature, theater, and popular culture have evolved over the past century.

Arvustused

David Bordwell has a brain I envy, one that makes connections and associations about books, film, and the arts that are breathtakingly unorthodox and exactly correct. I learned so much from reading Perplexing Plots about how crime narratives are situated in the larger literary and cinema spheres, and rejoiced in how much pleasure Bordwell's criticism provided, once more and always. -- Sarah Weinman, author of Scoundrel: How a Convicted Murderer Persuaded the Women Who Loved Him, the Conservative Establishment, and the Courts to Set Him Free My favorite of David Bordwells many important books, this is an engrossing tour of crime and mystery storytelling in literature high and low, with asides on film, theater, and other media. Im in awe of its encyclopedic reach, erudition, analytic brilliance, clarity, and wit. Its wonderfully instructive and fun. -- James Naremore, author of More than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts Perplexing Plots is the most illuminating study of narrative technique that Ive read. David Bordwells investigation of popular storytelling benefits from his exceptional breadth of knowledge and analytic skills. But what is especially impressive is his ability to present information and insights so persuasivelyand so readably. An admirable achievement. -- Martin Edwards, author of The Life of Crime: Detecting the History of Mysteries and their Creators Bordwell's is the first-ever-historical poetics of cross-media storytelling in which inventions and conventions, the new and the old, the brainy and the brainless are considered not as successive stages of, as Mandelstam called it, a "boring bearded development," but as complementary components of a creative symbiosis. -- Yuri Tsivian, author of Approaches to Carpalistics: Movement and Gesture in Art, Literature and Film Perplexing Plots is a must. Rare is scholasticism this engaging youll put it down with more than a handful of authors to discover, not to mention the movies adapted from them. * Boulder Weekly * Bordwells work is exceptionally well-researched and offers fascinating examinations of plot devices, patterns, and structure in crime fiction. This book is sure to be enjoyed by fans of crime fiction and film noir. * Hometowns to Hollywood * [ Bordwell's] voluminous work on film underpins his sensitivity to questions of narrative voice, points of view and misdirection in novel-writing. Better yet, his writing radiates an enthusiasm that will please both genre fans and literary scholars. The book is readable and very entertaining. * Sight and Sound * An engaging study of how twentieth- and twenty-first-century storytellers across literature, film, radio, and stage have coaxed audiences along as collaborators in the narrative process . . . reading Perplexing Plots is a hell of a lot of fun. * Noir City Magazine * [ A] terrific book. -- Michael Dirda * Washington Post * Perplexing Plots is unfailingly rich and fascinating, and Bordwells exegeses on popular narrative will be central to studies of the concept far into the future. * New Review of Film and Television Studies * Wildly illuminating. * The Film Stage * A highly recommended title. * Popcultureshelf.com * Like the great detectives he writes about, Bordwell shows off his encyclopedic knowledge and his dazzling analytic powers, laying out his case with an abundance of evidence. . . . Highly recommended. * Choice Reviews * Bordwell, Americas finest film scholar, has connected the dots between movies and popular detective stories . . . for a thrilling X-ray of genre. -- Phillip Lopate * The Millions * Highly recommended. * Journal of Popular Culture * [ A] brilliant book . . . Bordwell has been one of the great exponents of precise formal analysis for whom methods of narration are never to be taken for granted. His writing is at once impeccably scholarly and acutely sensitive to the human use of stories and the part they play in peoples lives . . . I was exhilarated by Bordwells multiple demonstrations of the pleasures of deflection and distraction, shapely detours and sidewise turns, in the service of what he calls the playful experience of form. -- Geoffrey OBrien * New York Review of Books * A deeply researched dive into the history of crime fiction on the page and on the screen. Its a perfect capper to a career that revelled in the intricate, puzzle-like nature of film constructionthe way that shots, cuts, sounds, and images clue us in to deeper patterns of meaning. -- Justin Chang * The New Yorker * Weaving cultural history and textual analysis into an account that's as engaging and revealing as the popular fiction he investigates, Bordwell displays the full measure of research and erudition that were his hallmarks. * Cineaste *

Muu info

Winner of IFCA Book Prize, International Crime Fiction Association 2023. Short-listed for Agatha Awards - Best Mystery Nonfiction, Malice Domestic. Nominated for Edgar Allan Poe Award in the category of best critical/biographical, Mystery Writers of America 2024.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Mass Art as Experimental Storytelling 1(28)
PART I
1 The Art Novel Meets 1910s Formalism
29(26)
2 Making Confusion Satisfactory: Modernism and Other Mysteries
55(26)
3 Churn and Consolidation: The 1940s and After
81(38)
PART II
4 The Golden Age Puzzle Plot: The Taste of the Construction
119(38)
5 Before the Fact: The Psychological Thriller
157(37)
6 Dark and Full of Blood: Hard-Boiled Detection
194(41)
7 The 1940s: Mysteries in Crossover Culture
235(26)
8 The 1940s: The Problem of Other Minds, or Just One
261(24)
PART III
9 The Great Detective Rewritten: Erle Stanley Gardner and Rex Stout
285(33)
10 Viewpoints, Narrow and Expansive: Patricia Highsmith and Ed McBain
318(18)
11 Donald Westlake and the Richard Stark Machine
336(21)
12 Tarantino, Twists, and the Persistence of Puzzles
357(25)
13 Gone Girls: The New Domestic Thriller
382(23)
Conclusion: The Power of Limits 405(8)
Notes 413(54)
Index 467
David Bordwell is the Jacques Ledoux Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the University of WisconsinMadison. His many books include, most recently, Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed Movie Storytelling (2017), as well as the widely used textbook Film Art: An Introduction (twelfth edition, 2020). He cohosts the Observations on Film Art series of video essays on the Criterion Channel.