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Theorizing the Moving Image

Theorizing the Moving Image

Theorizing the Moving Image

Author:
Noel Carroll, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Published:
May 1996
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780521466073

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Paperback
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Hardback

    A selection of essays written by a leading film critic, this 1996 volume examines theoretical aspects of film and television through penetrating analyses of such genres as soap opera, documentary, comedy, and such topics as 'sight gags', film metaphor, point-of-view editing, and movie music. Throughout, individual films are considered in depth. Carroll's essays, moreover, represent the cognitivist turn in film studies, containing in-depth criticism of existing approaches to film theory.

    • Essays by leading scholar brought together in one volume
    • In-depth criticisms of existing approaches to film theory
    • Heralds a new approach to film theory - piece-meal theorising

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Professor Carroll has, in one densely packed collection of thought-provoking essays, forever changed the past, present and future of film theory. His rationale reintroduces creativity to a genre burdened with well-intentioned, but ultimately binding and counter-productive rules imposed by an emerging pool of critics. Professor Carroll answers his own critics with clarity and objectivity, and gives logical arguments in favor of a new approach. This volume will, no doubt, perplex and provoke students of film theory for years to come." Midwest Book Review

    "For its breadth of scholarship, its fecundity of ideas, and its rigor in argument, Theorizing the Moving Image deserves a place on the shelves of anyone interested in the study of film." Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 1996
    Hardback
    9780521460491
    450 pages
    259 × 181 × 26 mm
    1.06kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Questioning Media:
    • 1. Medium specificity arguments and the self-consciously invented arts
    • 2. The specificity of media in the arts
    • 3. Concerning uniqueness claims for photographic and cinematographic representation
    • 4. Defining the moving image
    • Part II. Popular Film and TV:
    • 5. The power of movies
    • 6. Toward a theory of film suspense
    • 7. As the dial turns: notes on soap operas
    • 8. Toward a theory of point of view editing
    • 9. Notes on movie music
    • 10. Notes on the sight gag
    • Part III. Avant-garde and Documentary Film:
    • 11. Avant-garde film and film theory
    • 12. Causation, the amplification of movement and the avant-garde film
    • 13. Language and cinema: preliminary notes for a theory of verbal images
    • 14. A note on film metaphor
    • 15. From real to reel: entangled in non-fiction film
    • 16. Reply to Carol Browson and Jack C. Wolf
    • Part IV. Ideology:
    • 17. The image of women in film: a defense of a paradigm
    • 18. Film, rhetoric and ideology
    • Part V. The History of Film Theory:
    • 19. Film/mind analogies: the case of Hugo Munsterberg
    • 20. Hans Richter's Struggle for Film
    • 21. A brief note on Frampton's notion of metahistory
    • Part VI. Polemical Exchanges:
    • 22. Cognitivism, contemporary film theory and method
    • 23. Cracks in the acoustic mirror
    • 24. A reply to Heath
    • 25. Replies to Jennifer Hammett and Richard Allen
    • Part VII. False Starts:
    • 26. Film history and film theory
    • 27. Art, film and ideology
    • 28. Toward a theory of film editing.
      Author
    • Noel Carroll , University of Wisconsin, Madison