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Metacinema

The Form and Content of Filmic Reference and Reflexivity

Edited by David LaRocca

Type
Essays
Subject
Theory
Keywords
theory
Publishing date
2021
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 344 pages
6 x 9 ¼ inches (15.5 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-0-19-009535-2
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Book Presentation:
• Sheds new light on the role of meta in film and culture, including a series of robust takes on how to employ the term
• Proposes and contributes to a new subfield in film studies
• Highlights a range of essential films from Hollywood, global cinema, and the experimental film tradition
• Contains bold interpretations from experts in the philosophy of film and aesthetics

When a work of art shows an interest in its own status as a work of art—either by reference to itself or to other works—we have become accustomed to calling this move "meta." While scholars and critics have, for decades, acknowledged reflexivity in films, it is only in Metacinema, for the first time, that a group of leading and emerging film theorists join to enthusiastically debate the meanings and implications of the meta for cinema. In new essays on generative films, including Rear Window, 8 1/2, Holy Motors, Funny Games, Fight Club, and Clouds of Sils Maria, contributors chart, explore, and advance the ways in which metacinema is at once a mode of filmmaking and a heuristic for studying cinematic attributes. What results is not just an engagement with certain practices and concepts in widespread use in the movies (from Hollywood to global cinema, from documentary to the experimental and avant-garde), but also the development of a veritable and vital new genre of film studies. With more and more films expressing reflexivity, recursion, reference to other films, mise-en-abîme, seriality, and exhibiting related intertextual and intermedial traits, the time is overdue for the kind of capacious yet nuanced critical study found in Metacinema.

About the Author:
Edited by David LaRocca, Filmmaker and Freelance Scholar David LaRocca is the author, editor, or co-editor of twelve books, including The Thought of Stanley Cavell and Cinema, The Philosophy of Documentary Film, The Philosophy of War Films, and The Philosophy of Charlie Kaufman. He has contributed book chapters on Werner Herzog, Terrence Malick, Michael Mann, Sofia Coppola, Casey Affleck, Kelly Reichardt, Errol Morris, Rithy Panh, Christopher Nolan, Spike Lee, Joel and Ethan Coen, Steven Spielberg, Robert Zemeckis, Tim Burton, and Charlie Kaufman. His articles have appeared in Afterimage, Conversations, Epoché, Estetica, Liminalities, Post Script, Transactions, Film and Philosophy, The Senses and Society, The Midwest Quarterly, Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies, The Journal of Aesthetic Education, and The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. As a documentary filmmaker, he produced and edited six features in The Intellectual Portrait Series, directed Brunello Cucinelli: A New Philosophy of Clothes, and codirected New York Photographer: Jill Freedman in the City. He was Harvard's Sinclair Kennedy Traveling Fellow in the United Kingdom and participated in an NEH Institute, a workshop with Abbas Kiarostami, Werner Herzog's Rogue Film School, and the School of Criticism and Theory at Cornell. He has taught philosophy and cinema and held visiting research and teaching positions at Binghamton, Cornell, Cortland, Harvard, Ithaca College, and Vanderbilt.

Press Reviews:
"Theoretically sophisticated and deeply invested in close textual analysis, this book will appeal most to those with an interest in philosophical approaches to cinema." - D Herbert, CHOICE

"We all know meta when we see it, but up until now few have attempted to define it. This terrific book, comprising essays from both established and emerging scholars, is a welcome corrective to that oversight, and a vital addition to contemporary film and media theory." - Catherine Wheatley, Reader in Film and Visual Culture, King's College London

See the publisher website: Oxford University Press

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The Thought of Stanley Cavell and Cinema:Turning Anew to the Ontology of Film a Half-Century after The World Viewed

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The Philosophy of Documentary Film:Image, Sound, Fiction, Truth

The Philosophy of Documentary Film (2016)

Image, Sound, Fiction, Truth

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