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Deathwatch

American Film, Technology, and the End of Life

by

Type
Studies
Subject
Keywords
death
Publishing date
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Collection
Film and Culture
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover288 pages
6 x 9 ¼ inches (15.5 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-0-231-16346-0
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Book Presentation:
The first book to unpack American cinema's long history of representing death, this work considers movie sequences in which the process of dying becomes an exercise in legibility and exploration for the camera. Reading attractions-based cinema, narrative films, early sound cinema, and films using voiceover or images of medical technology, C. Scott Combs connects the slow or static process of dying to formal film innovation throughout the twentieth century. He looks at Thomas Edison's Electrocuting an Elephant (1903), D. W. Griffith's The Country Doctor (1909), John Ford's How Green Was My Valley (1941), Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard (1950), Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby (2004), among other films, to argue against the notion that film cannot capture the end of life because it cannot stop moving forward. Instead, he shows how the end of dying occurs more than once and in more than one place, understanding death in cinema as constantly in flux, wedged between technological precision and embodied perception.

About the Author:
C. Scott Combs is associate professor of English at St. John's University in New York City.

Press Reviews:
Genuinely exciting and brimming with original insights. Given cinema's eternal fascination with death, coupled with film theory's obsessive need to explore the crossroads of photographic representation and the end of life, Combs's ambitious attempts to interweave these concerns are welcome and illuminating. Adam Lowenstein, author of Shocking Representation: Historical Trauma, National Cinema, and the Modern Horror Film

Combs shows that death in cinema is never just a random theme, but forms an essential aspect of a film's narrative structure and stylistics. I consider this one of the most impressive works I have read in recent years. Tom Gunning, author of The Films of Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity

Beautifully written and masterfully balanced between historical research and theoretical reflection, this book is a must-read for anyone interested in what cinema still has to tell us about our relationship to death and dying. Domietta Torlasco, author of The Heretical Archive: Digital Memory at the End of Film

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