Making Sense of Cinema
Empirical Studies into Film Spectators and Spectatorship
Edited by Carrielynn D. Reinhard and Christopher J. Olson

Average rating: ![]()
| 0 | rating | |
| 0 | rating | |
| 0 | rating | |
| 0 | rating |
Your rating: -
Book Presentation:
There are a variety of theoretical and methodological approaches to researching how film spectators make sense of film texts, from the film text itself, the psychological traits and sociocultural group memberships of the viewer, or even the location and surroundings of the viewer. However, we can only understand the agency of film spectators in situations of film spectatorship by studying actual spectators' interactions with specific film texts in specific contexts of engagement.
Making Sense of Cinema: Empirical Studies into Film Spectators and Spectatorship uses a number of empirical approaches (ethnography, focus groups, interviews, historical, qualitative experiment and physiological experiment) to consider how the film spectator makes sense of the text itself or the ways in which the text fits into his or her everyday life. With case studies ranging from preoccupations of queer and ageing men in Spanish and French cinema and comparative eye-tracking studies based on the two completely different soundscapes of Monsters Inc. and Saving Private Ryan to cult fanbase of the Lord of the Rings Trilogy and attachment theory to its fictional characters, Making Sense of Cinema aligns this subset of film studies with the larger fields of media reception studies, allowing for dialogue with the broader audience and reception studies field.
About the authors:
CarrieLynn D. Reinhard is an Associate Professor in Communication Arts and Sciences at Dominican University, Illinois, USA, where her research focuses on sense-making in media reception. She completed her Ph.D. in Communication at Ohio State University, USA, and was a post-doctoral research fellow for the Virtual World Research Group at Roskilde University in Denmark.Christopher J. Olson is a PhD student enrolled in the Media, Cinema, and Digital Studies program of the English Department at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA.
Press Reviews:
"An important contribution to film spectatorship studies. What is unique about this collection is the focus on empirical analysis to analyze how actual (as opposed to implied) spectators construct meaning from their viewing experience. The essays included here employ a variety of methodologies and cover a broad array of genres and geographical areas, both past and present. A fascinating work of scholarship of interest to anyone seeking to understand better the global spectator’s viewing experience." ― David N. Coury, Professor of Humanistic Studies and Global Studies, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, USA
"Reading Making Sense of Cinema I was totally baffled to see the film spectator arise brightly, high-res and three-dimensional, from the dark, cross-lit by manifold complementary color spots cast by specialists in disciplines as diverse as linguistics, acoustics, art history, cultural studies, cultural analysis, audience research, communication research, cinematography, critical (genre) studies, visual perception, neuroinformatics, cognitive film studies, and screen writing. And all it seemed to take is a shared conviction that direct observation makes for the brighter picture. ― Ed Tan, Professor of Media Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
See the publisher website: Bloomsbury Academic
> From the same authors:
Mystery Science Theater 3000 (2024)
A Cultural History
by Matt Foy and Christopher J. Olson
Subject: One Film > Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV Series)
Normalizing Mental Illness and Neurodiversity in Entertainment Media (2023)
Quieting the Madness
Dir. Malynnda Johnson and Christopher J. Olson
Subject: Sociology
> On a related topic:
Screens and Illusionism (2024)
Alternative Teleologies of Mediation
Dir. Peter Bloom and Dominique Jullien
Subject: Theory
The Prison of Time (2024)
Stanley Kubrick, Adrian Lyne, Michael Bay and Quentin Tarantino
Subject: Theory
Deep Mediations (2021)
Thinking Space in Cinema and Digital Cultures
Dir. Karen Redrobe and Jeff Scheible
Subject: Theory