Description

Book Synopsis

Film and philosophy have much in common, and books have been written on film and philosophy. But can films be, or do, philosophy? Can they “think”? Film as Philosophy is the first book to explore this fascinating question historically, thematically, and methodically.

Bringing together leading scholars from universities across the globe, Film as Philosophy presents major new research that leads film studies and philosophy into a productive dialogue. It provides a uniquely sweeping, historical overview of the confluence of film and philosophy for more than a century, considering films from Jean Renoir, Lars von Trier, Jørgen Leth, David Lynch, Michael Haneke, and others; the written works of filmmakers who also theorized on the medium, including Sergei Eisenstein and Jean Epstein; and others who have written on cinema, including Hugo Münsterberg, Béla Balázs, André Bazin, Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze, Stanley Cavell, Alain Badiou, Jacques Rancière, and many more.

Representing a major step toward establishing a media philosophy that puts the status, role, and function of film into a new perspective, Film as Philosophy removes representational techniques from the center of inquiry, replacing these with the medium’s ability to “think.” Hence it accords film with “agency,” and the dialogue between it and philosophy (and even neuroscience) is negotiated anew.

Contributors: Nicole Brenez, U of Paris 3–Sorbonne; Elisabeth Bronfen, U of Zurich; Noël Carroll, CUNY; Tom Conley, Harvard U; Angela Dalle Vacche, Georgia Institute of Technology; Gregory Flaxman, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Alex Ling, Western Sydney U; Adrian Martin, Monash U; John Ó Maoilearca, Kingston U, London; Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie U, Sydney; Murray Smith, U of Kent, Canterbury; Julia Vassilieva, Monash U, Melbourne; Christophe Wall-Romana, U of Minnesota; and Thomas E. Wartenberg, Mount Holyoke College.



Trade Review

"The essays in this superb collection show how contradictory and even imaginary the field is. Highly recommended."—CHOICE

"Film As Philosophy offers the reader a productive set of ideas for navigating today’s post-everything landscape."—Leonardo

"This is a dense but very instructive volume for both novice and knowledgeable readers interested in the relation of film and philosophy. These essays offer a comprehensive range of theoretical accounts and genealogies that explore the film-philosophy encounter as one that elicits fruitful and open possibilities of thought." —European Journal of American Studies


"The essays in this superb collection show how contradictory and even imaginary the field is. Highly recommended."—CHOICE

"Film as Philosophy offers the reader a productive set of ideas for navigating today’s post-everything landscape."—Leonardo

"Film as Philosophy is a big book, in more ways than one, and a strong contribution to the debate about whether film can actually do the work of philosophy."—Film International

"This is a dense but very instructive volume for both novice and knowledgeable readers interested in the relation of film and philosophy. These essays offer a comprehensive range of theoretical accounts and genealogies that explore the film-philosophy encounter as one that elicits fruitful and open possibilities of thought."—European Journal of American Studies

"Film as Philosophy represents a remarkable achievement, providing a unique overview of its subject that at once serves as an illuminating introduction for those unfamiliar with the field, and advances our understanding of film as a cognitive rather than a purely representational phenomenon–of film as philosophy."—Film-Philosophy



Table of Contents

Contents
Introduction. Film and/as Philosophy: An Elective Affinity?
Bernd Herzogenrath
1. Striking Poses: Gesture, Image, and Remake in the Cinematic Bergson
John Ó Maoilearca
2. Hugo Münsterberg, Film, and Philosophy
Robert Sinnerbrink
3. Different, Even Wholly Irrational Arguments: The Film-Philosophy of Béla Balázs
Adrian Martin
4. This is Your Brain on Cinema: Antonin Artaud
Gregory Flaxman
5. From Lyrosophy to “Anti-Philosophy”: The Thought of Cinema in Jean Epstein
Christophe Wall-Romana
6. Montage Eisenstein: Mind the Gap
Julia Vassilieva
7. André Bazin’s Film Theory and the History of Ideas
Angela Dalle Vacche
8. Strange Topologics: Deleuze Takes a Ride Down David Lynch’s Lost Highway
Bernd Herzogenrath
9. Hurray for Hollywood: Philosophy and Cinema According to Stanley Cavell
Elisabeth Bronfen
10. Thinking Cinema with Alain Badiou
Alex Ling
11. Thinking as Feast: Raymonde Carasco
Nicole Brenez
12. Rancière’s Film Theory as Deviation
Tom Conley
13. Movie-Made Philosophy
Noël Carroll
14. “Not Time’s Fool”: Marriage as an Ethical Relationship in Michael Haneke’s Amour
Thomas E. Wartenberg
15. Experience and Explanation in the Cinema
Murray Smith
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Index

Film as Philosophy

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    A Paperback / softback by Bernd Herzogenrath

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      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 21/03/2017
      ISBN13: 9781517900519, 978-1517900519
      ISBN10: 1517900514

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Film and philosophy have much in common, and books have been written on film and philosophy. But can films be, or do, philosophy? Can they “think”? Film as Philosophy is the first book to explore this fascinating question historically, thematically, and methodically.

      Bringing together leading scholars from universities across the globe, Film as Philosophy presents major new research that leads film studies and philosophy into a productive dialogue. It provides a uniquely sweeping, historical overview of the confluence of film and philosophy for more than a century, considering films from Jean Renoir, Lars von Trier, Jørgen Leth, David Lynch, Michael Haneke, and others; the written works of filmmakers who also theorized on the medium, including Sergei Eisenstein and Jean Epstein; and others who have written on cinema, including Hugo Münsterberg, Béla Balázs, André Bazin, Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze, Stanley Cavell, Alain Badiou, Jacques Rancière, and many more.

      Representing a major step toward establishing a media philosophy that puts the status, role, and function of film into a new perspective, Film as Philosophy removes representational techniques from the center of inquiry, replacing these with the medium’s ability to “think.” Hence it accords film with “agency,” and the dialogue between it and philosophy (and even neuroscience) is negotiated anew.

      Contributors: Nicole Brenez, U of Paris 3–Sorbonne; Elisabeth Bronfen, U of Zurich; Noël Carroll, CUNY; Tom Conley, Harvard U; Angela Dalle Vacche, Georgia Institute of Technology; Gregory Flaxman, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Alex Ling, Western Sydney U; Adrian Martin, Monash U; John Ó Maoilearca, Kingston U, London; Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie U, Sydney; Murray Smith, U of Kent, Canterbury; Julia Vassilieva, Monash U, Melbourne; Christophe Wall-Romana, U of Minnesota; and Thomas E. Wartenberg, Mount Holyoke College.



      Trade Review

      "The essays in this superb collection show how contradictory and even imaginary the field is. Highly recommended."—CHOICE

      "Film As Philosophy offers the reader a productive set of ideas for navigating today’s post-everything landscape."—Leonardo

      "This is a dense but very instructive volume for both novice and knowledgeable readers interested in the relation of film and philosophy. These essays offer a comprehensive range of theoretical accounts and genealogies that explore the film-philosophy encounter as one that elicits fruitful and open possibilities of thought." —European Journal of American Studies


      "The essays in this superb collection show how contradictory and even imaginary the field is. Highly recommended."—CHOICE

      "Film as Philosophy offers the reader a productive set of ideas for navigating today’s post-everything landscape."—Leonardo

      "Film as Philosophy is a big book, in more ways than one, and a strong contribution to the debate about whether film can actually do the work of philosophy."—Film International

      "This is a dense but very instructive volume for both novice and knowledgeable readers interested in the relation of film and philosophy. These essays offer a comprehensive range of theoretical accounts and genealogies that explore the film-philosophy encounter as one that elicits fruitful and open possibilities of thought."—European Journal of American Studies

      "Film as Philosophy represents a remarkable achievement, providing a unique overview of its subject that at once serves as an illuminating introduction for those unfamiliar with the field, and advances our understanding of film as a cognitive rather than a purely representational phenomenon–of film as philosophy."—Film-Philosophy



      Table of Contents

      Contents
      Introduction. Film and/as Philosophy: An Elective Affinity?
      Bernd Herzogenrath
      1. Striking Poses: Gesture, Image, and Remake in the Cinematic Bergson
      John Ó Maoilearca
      2. Hugo Münsterberg, Film, and Philosophy
      Robert Sinnerbrink
      3. Different, Even Wholly Irrational Arguments: The Film-Philosophy of Béla Balázs
      Adrian Martin
      4. This is Your Brain on Cinema: Antonin Artaud
      Gregory Flaxman
      5. From Lyrosophy to “Anti-Philosophy”: The Thought of Cinema in Jean Epstein
      Christophe Wall-Romana
      6. Montage Eisenstein: Mind the Gap
      Julia Vassilieva
      7. André Bazin’s Film Theory and the History of Ideas
      Angela Dalle Vacche
      8. Strange Topologics: Deleuze Takes a Ride Down David Lynch’s Lost Highway
      Bernd Herzogenrath
      9. Hurray for Hollywood: Philosophy and Cinema According to Stanley Cavell
      Elisabeth Bronfen
      10. Thinking Cinema with Alain Badiou
      Alex Ling
      11. Thinking as Feast: Raymonde Carasco
      Nicole Brenez
      12. Rancière’s Film Theory as Deviation
      Tom Conley
      13. Movie-Made Philosophy
      Noël Carroll
      14. “Not Time’s Fool”: Marriage as an Ethical Relationship in Michael Haneke’s Amour
      Thomas E. Wartenberg
      15. Experience and Explanation in the Cinema
      Murray Smith
      Acknowledgments
      Contributors
      Index

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