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Snuff: Real Death and Screen Media [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Bournemouth University, Bournemouth), Edited by (Northumbria University, UK), Edited by (University of Lincoln, UK), Edited by (Teesside University, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 644 g, 65 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1628921145
  • ISBN-13: 9781628921144
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 344 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 644 g, 65 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1628921145
  • ISBN-13: 9781628921144
Teised raamatud teemal:

The phenomenon of so-called 'snuff movies' (films that allegedly document real acts of murder, specifically designed to 'entertain' and sexually arouse the spectator) represents a fascinating socio-cultural paradox. At once unproven, yet accepted by many, as emblematic of the very worst extremes of pornography and horror, moral detractors have argued that the mere idea of snuff constitutes the logical (and terminal) extension of generic forms that are dependent primarily upon the excitement, stimulation and, ultimately, corruption of the senses.

Snuff: Real Death and Screen Media brings together some of film and media studies' leading voices to assess the longevity of one of screen media's most enduring cultural myths. Drawing on new research and theoretical perspectives, the contributions in this volume address areas ranging from exploitation movies, the video industry, trends in contemporary horror cinema, pornography, Web 2.0 and performance art in their quest to locate precisely where the cultural mythology of the snuff movie is situated within a twenty-first century mind-set. Thorough, provocative, and well argued, Snuff: Real Death and Screen Media should appeal to anyone interested in this controversial cultural phenomenon.

Arvustused

There is much to be said for this timely collection of essays ... It provides a rich archive of sources for interested readers; it is diverse in range but coherent in remit, and it addresses the topic broadly enough to appeal to many different scholars ... [ This] is a serious intervention deliberately situated at the intersection of debates about violence in society and violence in representation, which has long been a somewhat sensationalized space; it is an original and stimulating contribution to an otherwise undersubscribed area of intellectual interest. This book will be valuable to anyone interested in the ongoing debate about visuality, violence and death. * Visual Studies * These essays meticulously examine the history and mythology of the visual media's unholy grailthe spectral real behind film's reality effects. Tracing snuff's evolution from pornography to propaganda, from cult phenomenon to mainstream culture, this is the most comprehensive effort to date to track down the elusive phenomenon hovering at (and often defining) the boundaries between life and death, voyeurism and violence, terror and titillation, art and exploitation, realism and reality. Anyone seeking an unflinching glimpse of media in the digital age cannot ignore this collection. What was unthinkable a decade ago is now routine. Never have violence and terror been at once so visible and, as a result, so banal. * Joel Black, Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Georgia, USA * In the 1970s a toxic brew of urban decay, rising crime rates and the 'porno plague' gave rise to a new myth: that of the snuff film. Although the combination of sex and murder in the feature Snuff (1976) was quickly revealed as a hoax and the FBI could find no evidence that the real thing existed, the concept of the snuff film has endured and, ironically, taken on a life of its own. This collection of fascinating essays advances a scholarly and rigorous consideration of how the fringes of popular culture have become mainstreamed, and how media myths can become disturbing realities. * Eric Schaefer, Associate Professor of Visual and Media Arts, Emerson College, USA, and author of Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!: A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959 * Snuff: Real Death and Screen Media is both thorough and wide-ranging in its approaches to the complex and malleable category of the snuff film. This book is destined to become the key text on the representations and public debates which underpin the charged and vital topic of real death on screen, and the cultural, commercial, legal, and affective consequences of its associated myths. * Kate Egan, Lecturer in Film Studies, Aberystwyth University, UK, and author of Trash or Treasure? Censorship and the Changing Meanings of the Video Nasties *

Muu info

Brings together scholars from film and media studies for the definitive academic study of real death on screen - from horror cinema, to pornography, to online shock videos.
List of Figures
vii
Foreword: A Culture of Change David Kerekes ix
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction: Shot, Cut, and Slaughtered 1(20)
Neil Jackson
PART ONE THE CHANGING MEANINGS OF "SNUFF"
21(150)
1 The Way to Digital Death
23(24)
Julian Petley
2 The Affective Reality of Snuff
47(16)
Misha Kavka
3 Animal Snuff
63(18)
Simon Hobbs
4 Breathing New Life into Old Fears: Extreme Pornography and The Wider Politics of Snuff
81(24)
Clarissa Smith
5 From Snuff to the South: The Global Reception of Cannibal Holocaust
105(16)
Nicolo Gallio
Xavier Mendik
6 A Murder Mystery in Black and Blue: The Marketing, Distribution, and Cult Mythology of Snuff in The UK
121(16)
Mark McKenna
7 Traces of Snuff: Black Markets, Fan Subcultures, and Underground Horror in the 1990s
137(16)
Johnny Walker
8 Snuff 2.0: Real Death Goes HD Ready
153(18)
Mark Astley
PART TWO "SNUFF" ACROSS FILM AND TELEVISION
171(122)
9 Unfound Footage and Unfounded Rumors: The Manson Family Murders and the Persistence of Snuff
173(16)
Mark Jones
Gerry Carlin
10 Wild Eyes, Dead Ladies: the Snuff Filmmaker in Realist Horror
189(22)
Neil Jackson
11 The Mediation of Death in Fictional Snuff: Reflexivity, Viewer Interpellation, and Ethical Implication
211(14)
Xavier Aldana Reyes
12 "Why Would you Film It?" Snuff, Sinister, and Contemporary US Horror Cinema
225(16)
Shaun Kimber
13 Cinema As Snuff: From Precinema to Shadow of the Vampire
241(16)
Linda Badley
14 Affect and the Ethics of Snuff in Extreme Art Cinema
257(20)
Tina Kendall
15 A View to a Kill: Perspectives on Faux-Snuff and Self
277(16)
Steve Jones
List of Contributors 293(3)
Select Bibliography 296(13)
Index 309
Neil Jackson teaches film at the University of Lincoln, UK, and has published on popular cinema in various books and journals. He is currently preparing a critical study of Hollywood's representation of the adult film industry.

Shaun Kimber is Senior Lecturer in Media Theory at Bournemouth University, UK. He is the author of Controversies: Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (2011) and is currently working on the co-authored book Writing & Selling Horror Screenplays.

Johnny Walker is Lecturer in Media at Northumbria University, UK. He is the author of Contemporary British Horror Cinema: Industry, Genre and Society (2015) and founding co-editor of the Global Exploitation Cinemas book series (Bloomsbury).

Thomas Joseph Watson is Lecturer in Media Studies at Teesside University, UK. His research investigates the role of film form in the depiction of violence in contemporary audio-visual media. He has published on pornography, documentary film, and experimental video-art.