Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies

Front Cover
David Bordwell, Noel Carroll
Univ of Wisconsin Press, Feb 15, 1996 - Business & Economics - 564 pages
With Post-Theory, David Bordwell and Noël Carroll challenge the prevailing practices of film scholarship. Since the 1970s, film scholars have been searching for a unified theory that will explain all sorts of films, their production, and their reception; the field has been dominated by structuralist Marxism, varieties of cultural theory, and the psychoanalytic ideas of Freud and Lacan. Bordwell and Carroll ask, why not employ many theories tailored to specific goals, rather than searching for a unified theory?
Post-Theory offers fresh directions for understanding film, presenting new essays by twenty-seven scholars on topics as diverse as film scores, audience response, and the national film industries of Russia, Scandinavia, the U.S., and Japan. They use historical, philosophical, psychological, and feminist methods to tackle such basic issues as: What goes on when viewers perceive a film? How do filmmakers exploit conventions? How do movies create illusions? How does a film arouse emotion? Bordwell and Carroll have given space not only to distinguished film scholars but to non-film specialists as well, ensuring a wide variety of opinions and ideas on virtually every topic on the current agenda of film studies. Full of stimulating essays published here for the first time, Post-Theory promises to redefine the study of cinema.
 

Contents

I
xiii
II
1
III
3
V
37
VI
69
VII
71
VIII
87
IX
108
XX
307
XXII
325
XXIII
345
XXIV
347
XXVI
368
XXVII
388
XXVIII
407
XXX
419

X
130
XI
149
XII
175
XIII
195
XIV
219
XV
230
XVII
248
XVIII
283
XXXI
434
XXXII
460
XXXIII
481
XXXIV
501
XXXV
520
XXXVII
533
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