Description

Book Synopsis

The notion of landscape is a complex one, but it has been central to the art and artistry of the cinema. After all, what is the French New Wave without Paris? What are the films of Sidney Lumet, Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese, and Spike Lee without New York? Cinema and Landscape frames contemporary film landscapes across the world, in an exploration of screen aesthetics and national ideology, film form and cultural geography, cinematic representation and the human environment. Written by well-known cinema scholars, this volume both extends the existing field of film studies and stakes claims to overlapping, contested territories in the humanities and social sciences.



Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction – Cinema and Landscape – Graeme Harper, Bangor University and Jonathan Rayner, University of Sheffield

PART I: The Invention of the Cinematic Landscape

Chapter 2: Landscape and the Fantasy of Moving Pictures: Early Cinema’s Phantom Rides – Tom Gunning, University of Chicago

PART II: Mapping Cinematic Landscapes

Chapter 3: ‘One Foot in the Air?’ Landscape in the Soviet and Russian Road Movie – Emma Widdis, University of Cambridge

Chapter 4: Landscape of the Mind: The Indifferent Earth in Werner Herzog’s Films – Brad Prager, University of Missouri

Chapter 5: Visions of Italy: The Sublime, the Postmodern and the Apocalyptic – William Hope, Salford University

Chapter 6: Landscape in Spanish Cinema – Marvin D’Lugo, Clark University

Chapter 7: Landscape and Irish Cinema – Martin McLoone, University of Ulster

Chapter 8: The Ownership of Woods and Water: Landscapes in British Cinema 1930–1960 – Sue Harper, University of Portsmouth

Chapter 9: Filming the (Post-)Colonial Landscape: Claire Denis’ Chocolat (1988) and Beau travail (1998) – Susan Hayward, University of Exeter

Chapter 10: Landscaping the Revolution: The Political and Social Geography of Cuba Reflected in its Cinema – Bob Britton, University of Sheffield

Chapter 11: Landscapes of Meaning in Cinema: Two Indian Examples – Wimal Dissanayake, University of Hawaii

Chapter 12: The Geography of Cinema – Zimbabwe – Martin Mhando, Murdoch University

Chapter 13: Crises, Economy and Landscape: The Modern Film Face of New China – Kate Taylor, Bangor University

Chapter 14: Japanese Cinema and Landscape – Paul Spicer, University of Portsmouth

Chapter 15: A Version of Beauty and Terror: Australian Cinematic Landscapes – Graeme Harper, Bangor University

Chapter 16: Battlefields of Vision: New Zealand Filmscapes – Jonathan Rayner, University of Sheffield

Chapter 17: The Landscapes of Canada’s Features: Articulating Nation and Nature – Jim Leach, Brock University

Chapter 18: Science Fiction/Fantasy Films, Fairy Tales and Control: Landscape Stereotypes on a Wilderness to Ultra-urban Continuum – Christina Kennedy, Tiánna and Mélisa Kennedy, Northern Arizona University

Cinema and Landscape: Film, Nation and Cultural

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    A Paperback / softback by Graeme Harper, Jonathan Rayner

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      View other formats and editions of Cinema and Landscape: Film, Nation and Cultural by Graeme Harper

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 30/06/2010
      ISBN13: 9781841503097, 978-1841503097
      ISBN10: 1841503096

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The notion of landscape is a complex one, but it has been central to the art and artistry of the cinema. After all, what is the French New Wave without Paris? What are the films of Sidney Lumet, Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese, and Spike Lee without New York? Cinema and Landscape frames contemporary film landscapes across the world, in an exploration of screen aesthetics and national ideology, film form and cultural geography, cinematic representation and the human environment. Written by well-known cinema scholars, this volume both extends the existing field of film studies and stakes claims to overlapping, contested territories in the humanities and social sciences.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Introduction – Cinema and Landscape – Graeme Harper, Bangor University and Jonathan Rayner, University of Sheffield

      PART I: The Invention of the Cinematic Landscape

      Chapter 2: Landscape and the Fantasy of Moving Pictures: Early Cinema’s Phantom Rides – Tom Gunning, University of Chicago

      PART II: Mapping Cinematic Landscapes

      Chapter 3: ‘One Foot in the Air?’ Landscape in the Soviet and Russian Road Movie – Emma Widdis, University of Cambridge

      Chapter 4: Landscape of the Mind: The Indifferent Earth in Werner Herzog’s Films – Brad Prager, University of Missouri

      Chapter 5: Visions of Italy: The Sublime, the Postmodern and the Apocalyptic – William Hope, Salford University

      Chapter 6: Landscape in Spanish Cinema – Marvin D’Lugo, Clark University

      Chapter 7: Landscape and Irish Cinema – Martin McLoone, University of Ulster

      Chapter 8: The Ownership of Woods and Water: Landscapes in British Cinema 1930–1960 – Sue Harper, University of Portsmouth

      Chapter 9: Filming the (Post-)Colonial Landscape: Claire Denis’ Chocolat (1988) and Beau travail (1998) – Susan Hayward, University of Exeter

      Chapter 10: Landscaping the Revolution: The Political and Social Geography of Cuba Reflected in its Cinema – Bob Britton, University of Sheffield

      Chapter 11: Landscapes of Meaning in Cinema: Two Indian Examples – Wimal Dissanayake, University of Hawaii

      Chapter 12: The Geography of Cinema – Zimbabwe – Martin Mhando, Murdoch University

      Chapter 13: Crises, Economy and Landscape: The Modern Film Face of New China – Kate Taylor, Bangor University

      Chapter 14: Japanese Cinema and Landscape – Paul Spicer, University of Portsmouth

      Chapter 15: A Version of Beauty and Terror: Australian Cinematic Landscapes – Graeme Harper, Bangor University

      Chapter 16: Battlefields of Vision: New Zealand Filmscapes – Jonathan Rayner, University of Sheffield

      Chapter 17: The Landscapes of Canada’s Features: Articulating Nation and Nature – Jim Leach, Brock University

      Chapter 18: Science Fiction/Fantasy Films, Fairy Tales and Control: Landscape Stereotypes on a Wilderness to Ultra-urban Continuum – Christina Kennedy, Tiánna and Mélisa Kennedy, Northern Arizona University

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