MENU   

Death and the Moving Image

Ideology, Iconography and I

by

Type
Studies
Subject
Keywords
death, representation
Publishing date
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover272 pages
6 x 9 ¼ inches (15.5 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-0-7486-2443-0
User Ratings
no rating (0 vote)

Average rating: no rating

0 rating 1 star = We can do without
0 rating 2 stars = Good book
0 rating 3 stars = Excellent book
0 rating 4 stars = Unique / a reference

Your rating: -

Book Presentation:
Winner of the 2015 Kraszna-Krausz Best Moving Image Book AwardExamines the representation of death and dying in mainstream cinema

Death and the Moving Image reveals the ambivalent place of death in twentieth and twenty-first century culture: the ongoing split between its over- and under-statement, between its cold, bodily, realities and its fantastical, transcendental and, most importantly, strategic depictions. Our screens are steeped in death’s dramatics: in spectacles of glorious sacrifice or bloody retribution, in the ecstasy of agony, but always in the promise of redemption. This book is about the staging of these dramatics in mainstream Western film and the discrepancies that fuel them and are, by return, fuelled by them. Exploring the impact of gender, race, nation or narration upon them, this groundbreaking study isolates how mainstream cinema works to bestow value upon certain lives, and specific socio-cultural identities, in a hierarchical and partisan way.

Key Features
• Examines the formal, psychological and political exchange between cinema and death
• Accessible 'before, during, after' structure: of death's presence as narrative promise, physical event and spectatorial reaction.
• Considers how filmmaking practice or visual medium affect the representation of death and its cultural significance

About the Author:
Michele Aaron is Senior Lecturer in American and Canadian Studies at the University of Birmingham.

Press Reviews:
Through a series of sophisticated and highly nuanced readings of a wide range of films, Michele Aaron exposes the mortal economies on which cinema depends. This important book will cause readers to think again about the ethical and political stakes of the filmic treatment of death in mainstream cinema and beyond.'– Sarah Cooper, King’s College London

Through a series of sophisticated and highly nuanced readings of a wide range of films, Michele Aaron exposes the mortal economies on which cinema depends. This important book will cause readers to think again about the ethical and political stakes of the filmic treatment of death in mainstream cinema and beyond.– Sarah Cooper, King’s College London

This compelling and exhaustive study will be a must read for scholars working at the intersection of visual culture and studies of death. Michele Aaron moves through several genres of film and spans the production of films from the 1940s into the 21st century. Specifically, she argues that there is a pervasive aesthetic of self-risk in cinema, a death-drive that secures our several understandings of how contemporary culture masks its own political ends. Moving beyond the psychoanalytic, Aaron ultimately and convincingly demonstrates that it is the ethical in cinema that continues to be denied its proper place, even in the midst of its centrality in the genre. This is bold and welcomed new work.'– Sharon P. Holland, Duke University

This compelling and exhaustive study will be a must read for scholars working at the intersection of visual culture and studies of death. Michele Aaron moves through several genres of film and spans the production of films from the 1940s into the 21st century. Specifically, she argues that there is a pervasive aesthetic of self-risk in cinema, a death-drive that secures our several understandings of how contemporary culture masks its own political ends. Moving beyond the psychoanalytic, Aaron ultimately and convincingly demonstrates that it is the ethical in cinema that continues to be denied its proper place, even in the midst of its centrality in the genre. This is bold and welcomed new work.– Sharon P. Holland, Duke University

See the

> From the same author:

Spectatorship:The Power of Looking On

(2007)

The Power of Looking On

by

Subject:

New Queer Cinema:A Critical Reader

(2004)

A Critical Reader

Dir.

Subject:

> On a related topic:

Cinematic Cryptonymies:The Absent Body in Postwar Film

(2018)

The Absent Body in Postwar Film

by

Subject:

Ghost Images:Cinema of the Afterlife

(2004)

Cinema of the Afterlife

by

Subject: On Films >

Hollywood Wants to Kill You:The Peculiar Science of Death in the Movies

(2020)

The Peculiar Science of Death in the Movies

by and

Subject:

Deathwatch:American Film, Technology, and the End of Life

(2014)

American Film, Technology, and the End of Life

by

Subject:

Haunting the Left Bank:Mortality and Intersubjectivity in Varda, Resnais and Marker

(2022)

Mortality and Intersubjectivity in Varda, Resnais and Marker

by

Subject:

Death in Documentaries:The Memento Mori Experience

(2017)

The Memento Mori Experience

by

Subject:

99 Ways to Die in the Movies

(2017)

Collective

Subject:

Afterlives:Allegories of Film and Mortality in Early Weimar Germany

(2016)

Allegories of Film and Mortality in Early Weimar Germany

by

Subject:

The Face on the Screen:Death, Recognition & Spectatorship

(2003)

Death, Recognition & Spectatorship

by

Subject:

17082 books listed   •   (c)2024-2026 cinemabooks.info   •  
Books in French are on www.livres-cinema.info