Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Projecting a More Habitable Globe: Hollywood's Yellow Peril and Its Refraction onto 1930s Shanghai National Cinema
- Chapter 2 Berlin – The City of Sound and Sensation in Fritz Lang's M and E. A. Dupont's Varieté
- Chapter 3 Bond's Body: Diamonds Are Forever, Casino Royale and the Future Anterior
- Chapter 4 Whatever You Say, Say Nothing
- Chapter 5 Imperial Gazes, Hollywood Predators: A Cinema of Molestation in Postcolonial Indian Literature
- Chapter 6 Linguistic Identity in Fruit Chan's 1997 Trilogy
- Chapter 7 The Postnational and the Aesthetics of the Spectral: Hou Hsiao-Hsien's Flight of the Red Balloon
- Chapter 8 The Art Object as Text in the Practice of Comparative Visuality
- Chapter 9 Exploring In-humanity: Gertrude Stein's Tender Buttons and Still-Life Painting
- Chapter 10 Re-defining Art: Manuel Rivas' Mujer en el baño
- Chapter 11 Re-envisioning the Haunting Past: Kara Walker's Art and the Re-appropriation of the Visual Codes of the Antebellum South
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Projecting a More Habitable Globe: Hollywood's Yellow Peril and Its Refraction onto 1930s Shanghai National Cinema
- Chapter 2 Berlin – The City of Sound and Sensation in Fritz Lang's M and E. A. Dupont's Varieté
- Chapter 3 Bond's Body: Diamonds Are Forever, Casino Royale and the Future Anterior
- Chapter 4 Whatever You Say, Say Nothing
- Chapter 5 Imperial Gazes, Hollywood Predators: A Cinema of Molestation in Postcolonial Indian Literature
- Chapter 6 Linguistic Identity in Fruit Chan's 1997 Trilogy
- Chapter 7 The Postnational and the Aesthetics of the Spectral: Hou Hsiao-Hsien's Flight of the Red Balloon
- Chapter 8 The Art Object as Text in the Practice of Comparative Visuality
- Chapter 9 Exploring In-humanity: Gertrude Stein's Tender Buttons and Still-Life Painting
- Chapter 10 Re-defining Art: Manuel Rivas' Mujer en el baño
- Chapter 11 Re-envisioning the Haunting Past: Kara Walker's Art and the Re-appropriation of the Visual Codes of the Antebellum South
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The aim of this collective volume of essays has been to combine some new contemporary analyses of two subjects of current ongoing research in the humanities: the cinema and the visual arts. The early origins of cinema involved the positioning and projection of a number of photographs in sequence by Eadweard Muybridge in Galloping Horse (1878) – to prove for a bet that all four hooves of a horse came off the ground when it ran – followed in 1889 by the development of the motion picture camera by Thomas Edison and William Dickson. The first recorded sound was a song recorded in 1860 to accompany the first ever moving picture, which was footage of a horseback rider (1878) followed by the first film ever made, which consisted of a silent film depicting four figures in a courtyard (1888). Ever since the date film was born, it has been an increasingly popular genre and cinema and filmmaking have been sources of admiration, fascination and particularly a rising trend towards critical analysis. The range and breadth of studies that exist in relation to film eras, genres, a nation's cinema, film theory or film culture is truly breathtaking. Many volumes of literary criticism have been written on the general subjects of what constitutes cinema, film theory, how to interpret a film, film narration, psychoanalysis, and many critical editions focus on a particular country's films, or a specific filmmaker, or a specific genre or era, such as censored films, silent films or early cinema.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- World Cinema and the Visual Arts , pp. xv - xxivPublisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2012