Damaged Romanticism

Damaged Romanticism

Author: Terrie Sultan

Publisher: Giles

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 138

ISBN-13:

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Features contemporary works of art that capture the existential dilemma of the human condition


Making Meaning in Popular Romance Fiction

Making Meaning in Popular Romance Fiction

Author: Jayashree Kamblé

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-08-07

Total Pages: 203

ISBN-13: 1137395052

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Despite pioneering studies, the term 'romance novel' itself has not been subjected to scrutiny. This book examines mass-market romance fiction in the U.K., Canada, and the U.S. through four categories: capitalism, war, heterosexuality, and white Protestantism and casts a fresh light on the genre.


Ghosts of a Low Moon

Ghosts of a Low Moon

Author: Andrew Oldham

Publisher: Lapwing Publications

Published: 2010-01-01

Total Pages: 70

ISBN-13: 1907276602

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Andrew Oldham's debut, is an ambitious, extensive and surreal collection of dreams, childhood memories and strange, fractured love affairs, which culminates in a tragic-comic journey through modern America.


Film Landscapes

Film Landscapes

Author: Graeme Harper

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2014-08-26

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 1443866318

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This book brings together critical and theoretical essays examining the connections between films and landscapes. It showcases the work of established and emerging academics whose research probes the complex relationships between moving images and the filmed environment, and accounts for the impactful effects of viewing lived spaces and human places on screen. The essays in this collection actively engage with examples of contemporary popular and art cinema, genre films and auteur canon, historical films, propaganda, documentary and animation in their explorations of the meanings with which filmed landscapes are endowed and invested. The breadth of the study is matched by the depth of the interest, with writers here approaching the subject of film landscapes as critics, as film practitioners, and as teachers of film studies and film making. Film Landscapes gives voice to a great many ideas, and includes coverage of a great many films; but it also points forward to ways in which we might revisit discussions of the environments of film and consider ways in which history and creativity, critical understanding and the interaction of human beings and place could be reconsidered and revised to produce new insights.


Beckett, Deleuze and the Televisual Event

Beckett, Deleuze and the Televisual Event

Author: C. Gardner

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2012-10-17

Total Pages: 226

ISBN-13: 1137014369

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An expressive dialogue between Deleuze's philosophical writings on cinema and Beckett's innovative film and television work, the book explores the relationship between the birth of the event – itself a simultaneous invention and erasure - and Beckett's attempts to create an incommensurable space within the interstices of language as a (W)hole.


The Gothic in Contemporary British Trauma Fiction

The Gothic in Contemporary British Trauma Fiction

Author: Ashlee Joyce

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-09-05

Total Pages: 235

ISBN-13: 3030267288

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This book examines the intersection of trauma and the Gothic in six contemporary British novels: Martin Amis’s London Fields, Margaret Drabble’s The Gates of Ivory, Ian McEwan’s Atonement, Pat Barker’s Regeneration and Double Vision, and Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go. In these works, the Gothic functions both as an expression of societal violence at the turn of the twenty-first century and as a response to the related crisis of representation brought about by the contemporary individual’s highly mediated and spectatorial relationship to this violence. By locating these six novels within the Gothic tradition, this work argues that each text, to borrow a term from Jacques Derrida, “participates” in the Gothic in ways that both uphold the paradigm of “unspeakability” that has come to dominate much trauma fiction, as well as push its boundaries to complicate how we think of the ethical relationship between witnessing and writing trauma.


Photographic Realism

Photographic Realism

Author: Kieran Cashell

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2020-10-15

Total Pages: 281

ISBN-13: 1350108715

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One of the most captivating and provocative artists of the Sensation generation, Richard Billingham (b. 1970) came to prominence in the late 1990s with his visceral photobook Ray's a Laugh, a slice of everyday life in a high-rise sink estate in the British West Midlands. This book is the first comprehensive discussion of Billingham's art practice. Articulating the socio-historical, aesthetic, geographical as well as anthropological aspects of Billingham's art, the book situates his work within the British neorealist tradition in visual art, cinema and televisual culture. Beginning with the first photographic studies of his father in the early 1990s, Cashell argues that these sympathetic, haunting images prefigure the later development of his thematic concerns. Significant consideration is also given to Billingham's cinematic oeuvre, including his recent feature-length autobiographical film, Ray & Liz, which substantially clarifies the complex continuity of his developing aesthetic vision. Illustrated throughout with colour and black and white reproductions, Photographic Realism: The Art of Richard Billingham combines investigative research with interviews and studio conversations, providing a subtle and sophisticated critical evaluation of the artist's key photographic and film-based works from the 1990s to the present.


Romanticism and Postromanticism

Romanticism and Postromanticism

Author: Claudia Moscovici

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 2007-02-09

Total Pages: 134

ISBN-13: 0739160508

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Claudia Moscovici asserts in Romanticism and Postromanticism that the Romantic heritage, far from being important only in a historical sense, has philosophical relevance and value for contemporary art and culture. With an emphasis on artistic tradition as a continuing source of inspiration and innovation, she touches upon each main branch of philosophy: aesthetics, epistemology, and ethics. The book begins by describing some of the most interesting features of the Romantic movement that still fuel our culture. It then addresses the question: How did an artistic movement whose focus was emotive expression change into a quest for formal experimentation? And finally, Moscovici considers the aesthetic philosophy of postromanticism by thinking through how the Romantic emphasis upon beauty and passion can be combined with the modern and postmodern emphasis on originality and experimentation.


Transnational Horror Across Visual Media

Transnational Horror Across Visual Media

Author: Dana Och

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-15

Total Pages: 286

ISBN-13: 1136744916

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This volume investigates the horror genre across national boundaries (including locations such as Africa, Turkey, and post-Soviet Russia) and different media forms, illustrating the ways that horror can be theorized through the circulation, reception, and production of transnational media texts. Perhaps more than any other genre, horror is characterized by its ability to be simultaneously aware of the local while able to permeate national boundaries, to function on both regional and international registers. The essays here explore political models and allegories, questions of cult or subcultural media and their distribution practices, the relationship between regional or cultural networks, and the legibility of international horror iconography across distinct media. The book underscores how a discussion of contemporary international horror is not only about genre but about how genre can inform theories of visual cultures and the increasing permeability of their borders.