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E-raamat: Roland Barthes' Cinema

Edited by (Associate Professor of French, Columbia University), (Professor of French, Columbia University), Edited by (Associate Professor of Frenc), Edited by (R. Selden Rose Professor of Film and Comparative Literature, Yale University), Edited by (, University of Grenoble)
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190277567
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  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190277567

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Roland Barthes' Cinema offers the first systematic English-language critical treatment of Barthes' writing on cinema, reassessing the relevance of his work for a new generation of readers and filmgoers. In six parts, it relates particular moments or phases in Barthes's intellectual itinerary: his early, largely ideologically driven critique of the mass media (and Hollywood cinema in particular); his innovative endeavors to construct a semiological, paralinguistic understanding of the status of the photographic or film image; his sideways shift into a renewed understanding of textual pleasures (including those of spectatorship); his attempts to elaborate a more fluid kind of theoretical understanding of textual affects and effects; and, finally, his return to the Romanticism of the fragment, of Schumann, and of what Watts describes as his "melodramatic imagination." In sum, this compact study serves as a primer to the central tenets of Barthes' thought as well as a survey of art cinema in the last half of the twentieth century.

Arvustused

this is a rich and nuanced intervention which changes how we see Roland Barthes and film. * Neil Badmington, Times Literary Supplement * Philip Watts' probing of Barthes' advance-retreat relationship to the movies is wise, sensitive and stimulating-in fact, brilliant. Even rarer is the warmth, clarity and goodwill he expresses toward the often antagonistic figures who championed French theory. The addition of several previously unavailable pieces by Barthes makes this an irresistible volume. * Philip Lopate, author of To Show and To Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction * Philip Watts' ground breaking work on Roland Barthes and cinema is a gift to film studies, to literary studies, and to theory. No other critic could match Watts in combining close textual analysis with historical insight. His encounter with Barthes' resistance to cinema shows a deep and refined critical vision, leavened by wit that Barthes would have appreciated. * Alice Kaplan, author of Dreaming in French: The Paris Years of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, Susan Sontag, and Angela Davis * Watts saw another Barthes besides the semiologist, the structuralist, the demystifier and the Brechtian Barthes, a Barthes who had always been in love with the image and with a particular aesthetics of daily life.... * Jacques Rancière * [ A] thoughtful bookWatts approach uncovers unexpected riches in what have seemed to be minor moments in Barthes work. The book has chapters on film and myth, on film and perception, on Barthes and Bazin, on film and utopian politics, on film theory, on melodrama Roland Barthes Cinema also includes new translations (by Deborah Glassman) of nine of Barthes less well-known articles on film. s

Editors' Preface ix
Introduction 1(8)
1 A Degraded Spectacle
9(16)
The Interpreter and the Sensualist
10(2)
Roman Hair
12(2)
A Cold War Cinema
14(3)
Demystification, 1957
17(3)
"The Face of Garbo"
20(5)
2 Refresh the Perception of the World
25(10)
"On CinemaScope"
26(2)
Barthes and the New Wave
28(7)
3 Barthes and Bazin
35(14)
Lost Continent
36(4)
From Ontology to Rhetoric and Back
40(5)
Camera Lucida
45(4)
4 Another Revolution
49(12)
The Fetishist
50(5)
Eisenstein, 1970
55(3)
Coda: From Leftocracy to Affect and Intimacy
58(3)
5 Leaving the Movie Theater
61(16)
The Science of Filmology
62(3)
Apparatus Theory
65(4)
The Aestheticization of the World
69(2)
A Long Conversation with Christian Metz
71(4)
Leaving Theory
75(2)
6 The Melodramatic Imagination
77(64)
The Bronte Sisters
77(3)
The New Wave's Melodramatic Turn
80(5)
Michel Foucault's Melodramatic Imagination
85(4)
Barthes and Foucault
89(2)
Barthes and Truffaut: Melodramatic Photography
91(5)
Conclusion: From Barthes to Ranciere?
96(4)
Interview With Jacques Ranciere
100(13)
Nine Texts on the Cinema by Roland Barthes
113(1)
Angels of Sin (Les Anges du peche, 1943)
113(3)
On CinemaScope
116(1)
Versailles and its Accounts
117(4)
Cinema Right and Left
121(3)
On Left-Wing Criticism
124(3)
"Traumatic Units" in Cinema: Research Principles
127(10)
Preface to Les Inconnus de la terre (Strangers of the Earth, Mario Ruspoli, 1961)
137(1)
Answer to a Question about James Bond
137(1)
Sade---Pasolini
138(3)
Notes 141(22)
Bibliography 163(16)
Index 179
Philip Watts was Professor of French at Columbia University and Chair of the department from 2008 to 2012. A specialist of twentieth-century French literature and film, he is the author of Allegories of the Purge: How Literature Responded to the Postwar Trials of Writers and Intellectuals in France and co-editor of Jacques Rancière: History, Politics, Aesthetics.