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El. knyga: Cinematic Ghosts: Haunting and Spectrality from Silent Cinema to the Digital Era

3.58/5 (23 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Formatas: 320 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781628922165
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 320 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781628922165
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"A collection of essays that explores the various roles ghosts have played in motion pictures, spanning a range of time periods, genres and nations"--

In 1896, Maxim Gorky declared cinema "the Kingdom of Shadows." In its silent, ashen-grey world, he saw a land of spectral, and ever since then cinema has had a special relationship with the haunted and the ghostly. Cinematic Ghosts is the first collection devoted to this subject, including fourteen new essays, dedicated to exploring the many permutations of the movies' phantoms.

Cinematic Ghosts contains essays revisiting some classic ghost films within the genres of horror (The Haunting, 1963), romance (Portrait of Jennie, 1948), comedy (Beetlejuice,1988) and the art film (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, 2010), as well as essays dealing with a number of films from around the world, from Sweden to China.Cinematic Ghosts traces the archetype of the cinematic ghost from the silent era until today, offering analyses from a range of historical, aesthetic and theoretical dimensions.

Recenzijos

There is much to interest readers and the book will (dare I say it) leave them in good spirits ... A thoughtful and entertaining addition to any film or religion studies collection, whether for personal or professional purposes, at undergraduate or postgraduate level. * Alphaville * The stand out feature of this collection is the diagnostic links between the content of ghost films and the ghostly techniques through which they are shot, a level of connection that puts Leeders text a step ahead of other purely thematic approaches to ghosts and haunted cinema. Cinematic Ghosts is just as much about ghostly cinematics, adding appeal to scholars of film production and spectral narratives alike. * Gothic Studies * Cinema has always been a ghostly medium. Now we finally have a book that explores films relation to ghosts with the breadth and depth it deserves, moving deftly across historical periods, genre classifications, and national origins. This is a rich and varied collection that will haunt in all the right ways a broad range of readers, scholars, and students. * Adam Lowenstein, Associate Professor of English and Film Studies, University of Pittsburgh, USA, and author of Dreaming of Cinema: Spectatorship, Surrealism, and the Age of Digital Media * Ghosts have haunted film from its earliest years to the present day, as this volume admirably demonstrates. It is impressive for its chronological and geographical range, and for the consistent quality of the contributions. Breaking new ground in exploring the interlinked theoretical, cultural and national stakes of cinematic haunting, this invaluable collection is certain to be a standard reference point for all future work in the field. * Colin Davis, Research Chair in French, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, and author of Haunted Subjects: Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis and the Return of the Dead * Murray Leeders strongly focused collection adds another exhilarating twist to the spectral turn by providing a welcome opportunity to reflect on the enduring notion of cinema as a haunted/haunting medium. Asking where non-figurative cinematic ghosts have been and where they might be going, a series of engaging contributions systematically charts the changing narrative, visual and sonic modes of haunting from the silent era to the digital age. Throughout, Cinematic Ghosts shows great sensitivity to the ghosts cultural and historical specificity and, in terms of the films discussed, effectivelyand fittinglycombines the expected with the unexpected. * Esther Peeren, Associate Professor in Globalisation Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and co-editor of The Spectralities Reader * Whether you've accepted a dare to spend one night in a haunted house or just have an interest in ghosts on the silver screen, Murray Leeder's Cinematic Ghosts is essential reading. Ranging from the origins of cinematic ghosts in nineteenth-century phantasmagoria to twenty-first century "glitch gothic," and from classic Western hauntings such as the The Innocents to the Asian onryo, this broad and engaging collection of essays--the first such collection specifically on cinematic ghosts--offers a lively, much-needed analysis of the history and appeal of movie phantoms. International in scope and historicist in approach, Cinematic Ghosts brilliantly showcases the depth and richness of supernatural film and will haunt all subsequent approaches to the topic. Ghostbusters, step aside. Murray Leeder is now the one to call if there's something strange in your neighborhood! * Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, Professor of English, Central Michigan University, USA *

Daugiau informacijos

A collection of essays that explores the various roles ghosts have played in motion pictures, spanning a range of time periods, genres and nations.
Acknowledgments viii
Introduction 1(14)
Murray Leeder
PART ONE Ghosts of Pre-Cinema and Silent Cinema
15(80)
1 Phantom Images and Modern Manifestations: Spirit Photography, Magic Theater, Trick Films, and Photography's Uncanny
17(22)
Tom Gunning
2 "Visualizing the Phantoms of the Imagination": Projecting the Haunted Minds of Modernity
39(20)
Murray Leeder
3 Specters of the Mind: Ghosts, Illusion, and Exposure in Paul Leni's The Cat and the Canary
59
Simone Natale
4 Supernatural Speech: Silent Cinema's Stake in Representing the Impossible
11(84)
Robert Alford
PART TWO Cinematic Ghosts from the 1940s through the 1980s
95(82)
5 Bad Sync: Spectral Sound and Retro-Effects in Portrait of Jennie
97(18)
Rene Thoreau Bruckner
6 "Antique Chiller": Quality, Pretention, and History in the Critical Reception of The Innocents and The Haunting
115(14)
Mark Jancovich
7 Shadows of Shadows: The Undead in Ingmar Bergman's Cinema
129(14)
Maurizio Cinquegrani
8 Locating the Specter in Dan Curtis's Burnt Offerings
143(16)
Dara Downey
9 The Bawdy Body in Two Comedy Ghost Films: Topper and Beetlejuice
159(18)
Katherine A. Fowkes
PART THREE Millennial Ghosts
177(113)
10 "I See Dead People": Visualizing Ghosts in the American Horror Film before the Arrival of CGI
179(20)
Steffen Hantke
11 Spectral Remainders and Transcultural Hauntings: (Re)iterations of the Onryo in Japanese Horror Cinema
199(20)
Jay McRoy
12 Painted Skin: Romance with the Ghostly Femme Fatale in Contemporary Chinese Cinema
219(16)
Li Zeng
13 "It's Not the House That's Haunted": Demons, Debt, and the Family in Peril in Recent Horror Cinema
235(18)
Bernice M. Murphy
14 Glitch Gothic
253(18)
Marc Olivier
15 Showing the Unknowable: Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
271(19)
Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano
Afterword: Haunted Viewers 290(6)
Jeffrey Sconce
List of Contributors 296(4)
Index 300
Murray Leeder is Adjunct Assistant Professor in Communication, Media and Film at the University of Calgary, Canada. He is the author The Modern Supernatural and the Beginnings of Cinema (2017) and Halloween (2013), and editor of Cinematic Ghosts (2015) and ReFocus: The Films of William Castle (2018).