Description

Book Synopsis

Marcel Duchamp’s urinal re-named ‘fountain’ and placed in an art gallery. The classic image that can be seen as a duck or a rabbit, depending on how you look at it. A random object that grabs your attention and, like a Freudian slip, sums up whatever’s on your mind. These are just a few examples of surrealist objects, items from everyday life that have something to tell us about the workings of the unconscious. In Reframing Reality, Alison Frank argues that the surrealist object offers a promising new way of understanding surrealism’s legacy in cinema. Early studies of surrealist cinema restricted themselves to the handful of films that received official approval from the surrealist group. More recent studies have looked more broadly at films that explore the unconscious as a theme.

Reframing Reality is the first to use the specifically surrealist concept of the surrealist object to trace the influence of surrealism in a broader range of films. When objects to do more than just advance the storyline, or have a mysterious meaning that is never fully explained, they are imitating the form of the surrealist object. Reframing Reality finds surrealist objects in films by Luis Buñuel and Jan Švankmajer, who acknowledged the importance of surrealism in their work, but also in the films of René Clair, Jean-Pierre Jeunet and the directors of the Czech New Wave, for whom surrealism was just one of many influences. By looking more closely at the role of objects in films, particularly those made during times of great change in the industry, we can gain a better understanding of both the legacy of surrealism in cinema and film language more generally.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter 1: Surrealist Objects and Cinema

The notion of the surrealist object

The hybrid object versus the surrealist object; cinema versus surrealism

Objects in surrealist cinema: Un Chien andalou

Chapter 2: Style and the Hybrid Object in Á Nous la liberté

Style in Á Nous la liberté

Object analysis

Chapter 3: The Everyday and the Hybrid Object in the Czech New Wave and Jan Švankmajer

The context of a cultural renewal

Czech surrealism from its beginnings to the 1960s

Common concerns of Czech surrealism and Czech New Wave

Hybrid objects and the Czech New Wave

Hybrid Objects and Jan Švankmajer’s short films of the 1960s

Chapter 4: Genre and the Hybrid Object in Late Bunuel

Generic hybridity and subjectivity in the 1930s and 60s

Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie

Belle de Jour

Cet obscure objet du désir

Chapter 5: Media Objects in Le Fabuluex destin d’Amélie Poulain

Jean-Pierre Jeunet and René Clair

Cinéma du look

Postmodernism

Media of expression and communication as objects

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

Reframing Reality: The Aesthetics of the

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    A Paperback / softback by Alison Frank

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      View other formats and editions of Reframing Reality: The Aesthetics of the by Alison Frank

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 15/02/2014
      ISBN13: 9781841507125, 978-1841507125
      ISBN10: 1841507121

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Marcel Duchamp’s urinal re-named ‘fountain’ and placed in an art gallery. The classic image that can be seen as a duck or a rabbit, depending on how you look at it. A random object that grabs your attention and, like a Freudian slip, sums up whatever’s on your mind. These are just a few examples of surrealist objects, items from everyday life that have something to tell us about the workings of the unconscious. In Reframing Reality, Alison Frank argues that the surrealist object offers a promising new way of understanding surrealism’s legacy in cinema. Early studies of surrealist cinema restricted themselves to the handful of films that received official approval from the surrealist group. More recent studies have looked more broadly at films that explore the unconscious as a theme.

      Reframing Reality is the first to use the specifically surrealist concept of the surrealist object to trace the influence of surrealism in a broader range of films. When objects to do more than just advance the storyline, or have a mysterious meaning that is never fully explained, they are imitating the form of the surrealist object. Reframing Reality finds surrealist objects in films by Luis Buñuel and Jan Švankmajer, who acknowledged the importance of surrealism in their work, but also in the films of René Clair, Jean-Pierre Jeunet and the directors of the Czech New Wave, for whom surrealism was just one of many influences. By looking more closely at the role of objects in films, particularly those made during times of great change in the industry, we can gain a better understanding of both the legacy of surrealism in cinema and film language more generally.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: Surrealist Objects and Cinema

      The notion of the surrealist object

      The hybrid object versus the surrealist object; cinema versus surrealism

      Objects in surrealist cinema: Un Chien andalou

      Chapter 2: Style and the Hybrid Object in Á Nous la liberté

      Style in Á Nous la liberté

      Object analysis

      Chapter 3: The Everyday and the Hybrid Object in the Czech New Wave and Jan Švankmajer

      The context of a cultural renewal

      Czech surrealism from its beginnings to the 1960s

      Common concerns of Czech surrealism and Czech New Wave

      Hybrid objects and the Czech New Wave

      Hybrid Objects and Jan Švankmajer’s short films of the 1960s

      Chapter 4: Genre and the Hybrid Object in Late Bunuel

      Generic hybridity and subjectivity in the 1930s and 60s

      Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie

      Belle de Jour

      Cet obscure objet du désir

      Chapter 5: Media Objects in Le Fabuluex destin d’Amélie Poulain

      Jean-Pierre Jeunet and René Clair

      Cinéma du look

      Postmodernism

      Media of expression and communication as objects

      Conclusion

      Bibliography

      Index

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