Description

Book Synopsis
Feminist film theory has flourished since the 1970s, but faces a double impasse. This title shows how studying women's filmmaking is more effective than criticizing mainstream movies from feminist perspectives. It analyzes films and screenplays by women to consider how women theorize the process and function of storytelling in cinema.

Trade Review
What a pleasant surprise that Cinematic Howling: Women’s Films, Women’s Film Theories, a new book for film and cultural studies, has all the elements of a good story with its unconventional title, engaging first person narrative and refreshing writing style! Yet Cinematic Howling is much more than a story about women’s films and feminist theory - it is an innovative theoretical work about gender identity and transnational culture with close readings that focus on the importance of storytelling in selected films by women filmmakers. ... Cheu has written an intriguing academic reference on women filmmakers....Cinematic Howling will prove very useful for feminist film analysis and cultural studies at the undergraduate and graduate levels. While the author of Cinematic Howling reminds us that there are many voices involved in the field of women’s films, some of these voices might need more room for expression in film studies classes, alongside Cheu’s thoughtful book. -- Judith Plessis * Canadian Literature, No. 195, Winter 2007 *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

1 Feminist Film Theory and the Postfeminist Era: Disney'sMulan

2 Howling for Multitudes: Angela Carter's The Company ofWolves

3 The Female Authorial Voice: Marguerite Duras' Hiroshimamon amour

4 Beyond Freud and Lacan: Susan Streitfeld's FemalePerversions

5 Cathartic Meta-narrative: Léa Pool's Lost andDelirious and Barbara Sweet's Perfect Pie (TwoScripts by Judith Thompson)

6 Diasporic Imagination and Transcultural Identity: Clara Law'sThe Goddess of 1967

7 Representing Representation: Agnès Varda's Sans toit niloi (Vagabond)

8 From Text to Context: Metadocumentary and Skyworks

9 Filling the Theory Vacuum: Marleen Gorris'Antonia

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Cinematic Howling

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    A Paperback / softback by Hoi Cheu

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      Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2008
      ISBN13: 9780774813792, 978-0774813792
      ISBN10: 0774813792

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Feminist film theory has flourished since the 1970s, but faces a double impasse. This title shows how studying women's filmmaking is more effective than criticizing mainstream movies from feminist perspectives. It analyzes films and screenplays by women to consider how women theorize the process and function of storytelling in cinema.

      Trade Review
      What a pleasant surprise that Cinematic Howling: Women’s Films, Women’s Film Theories, a new book for film and cultural studies, has all the elements of a good story with its unconventional title, engaging first person narrative and refreshing writing style! Yet Cinematic Howling is much more than a story about women’s films and feminist theory - it is an innovative theoretical work about gender identity and transnational culture with close readings that focus on the importance of storytelling in selected films by women filmmakers. ... Cheu has written an intriguing academic reference on women filmmakers....Cinematic Howling will prove very useful for feminist film analysis and cultural studies at the undergraduate and graduate levels. While the author of Cinematic Howling reminds us that there are many voices involved in the field of women’s films, some of these voices might need more room for expression in film studies classes, alongside Cheu’s thoughtful book. -- Judith Plessis * Canadian Literature, No. 195, Winter 2007 *

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      1 Feminist Film Theory and the Postfeminist Era: Disney'sMulan

      2 Howling for Multitudes: Angela Carter's The Company ofWolves

      3 The Female Authorial Voice: Marguerite Duras' Hiroshimamon amour

      4 Beyond Freud and Lacan: Susan Streitfeld's FemalePerversions

      5 Cathartic Meta-narrative: Léa Pool's Lost andDelirious and Barbara Sweet's Perfect Pie (TwoScripts by Judith Thompson)

      6 Diasporic Imagination and Transcultural Identity: Clara Law'sThe Goddess of 1967

      7 Representing Representation: Agnès Varda's Sans toit niloi (Vagabond)

      8 From Text to Context: Metadocumentary and Skyworks

      9 Filling the Theory Vacuum: Marleen Gorris'Antonia

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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