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Terrence Malick
Film and Philosophy
Terrence Malick
Film and Philosophy
Description
Each of the essays in Terrence Malick: Film and Philosophy is grounded in film studies, philosophical inquiry, and the emerging field of scholarship that combines the two disciplines. Malick's films are also open to other angles, notably phenomenological, deconstructive, and Deleuzian approaches to film, all of which are evidenced in this collection.
Terrence Malick: Film and Philosophy engages with Malick's body of work in distinct and independently significant ways: by looking at the tradition within which Malick works, the creative orientation of the filmmaker, and by discussing the ways in which criticism can illuminate these remarkable films.
Table of Contents
Stuart Kendall and Thomas Deane Tucker
Voicing Meaning: On Terrence Malick's Characters
Steven Rybin
Terrence Malick's Histories of Violence
John Bleasdale
Rührender Achtung: Terrence Malick's Cinematic Neo-Modernity
Thomas Wall
Worlding the West: An Ontopology of Badlands
Thomas Deane Tucker
Fields of Vision: Human Presence in the Plain Landscape of Badlands and Days of Heaven
Matthew Evertson
The Belvedere and the Bunkhouse: space and place in Days of Heaven
Ian Rijsdijk
The Tragic Indiscernibility of Days of Heaven
Stuart Kendall
Darkness from Light: Dialectics and The Thin Red Line
Russell Manning
Song of the Earth: Cinematic Romanticism in Malick's The New World
Robert Sinnerbrink
Whereof One Cannot Speak: Terrence Malick's The New World
Elizabeth Walden
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Product details
Published | 12 May 2011 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 240 |
ISBN | 9781441140272 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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