Keywords in Subversive Film/Media Aesthetics offers an exciting conversational journey through the overlying terrains of politically engaged art and artistically engaged politics. At once scholarly and entertaining, the book combines a major statement on subversive aesthetics, a survey of radical film strategies, and a comprehensive lexicon of concepts. Keywords defines, creates, and illustrates over a thousand terms and concept, drawing its examples from a wide range of media. Moving beyond political modernism, the book dramatically expands the definition of political cinema at a time when…mehr
Keywords in Subversive Film/Media Aesthetics offers an exciting conversational journey through the overlying terrains of politically engaged art and artistically engaged politics. At once scholarly and entertaining, the book combines a major statement on subversive aesthetics, a survey of radical film strategies, and a comprehensive lexicon of concepts. Keywords defines, creates, and illustrates over a thousand terms and concept, drawing its examples from a wide range of media. Moving beyond political modernism, the book dramatically expands the definition of political cinema at a time when radical film might not mean a feature or a documentary but rather a music video, a Colbert episode, or a digital mash-up. Each chapter explores a different 'current' within the broad range of alternative aesthetics, covering an Aesthetic of the Commons; the Carnivalesque and Festive-revolutionary Practices; Political Modernism and post-Brechtian Performance; the Transmogrification of the Negative, the Hybridization of Documentary and fiction; and the Fractured Chronotope, and the Musicalization of Cinema. An invaluable text for anyone interested in contemporary politics, aesthetics, and the media, Keywords offers a cornucopia of old and new strategies available for use by critics as well as by artists.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Robert Stam is University Professor at New York University. He has authored, co-authored and edited 17 books on film, cultural theory, national cinema, and postcolonial studies. His books include Francois Truffaut and Friends (2006), Literature through Film (2005), Film Theory: An Introduction (2000), and Tropical Multiculturalism (1997). He is co-author, with Ella Shohat, of Race in Translation (2012), Flagging Patriotism (2006), and Unthinking Eurocentrism (1994). Richard Porton is the author of Film and the Anarchist Imagination (1999) and editor of Dekalog 3: On Film Festivals (2009). One of the editors of Cineaste magazine, his work on film has appeared in Cinema Scope, Sight & Sound, and The Daily Beast. Leo Goldsmith is a PhD candidate in the Department of Cinema Studies at New York University. He is the Film Editor of The Brooklyn Rail.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 1 An Aesthetics of the Commons 29 The Aesthetic Commons 30 From Columbus to Indigenous Media 32 First Peoples, First Features 37 The Storytelling Commons 42 Revisionist Adaptation and the Literary Commons 47 Cultural Indigenization 53 The Archival Commons and the Ab?]original Musical 58 2 The Upside?]Down World of the Carnivalesque 68 The People's Second Life 68 Sacred Parody 72 Festive?]Revolutionary Practices 76 Unruly Women 79 Polymorphous Celebrations 83 Stand?]up Comedy and Nuclear Catastrophe 86 Contemporary Fools 90 Pedagogic Humor and Provocation 94 Tropes of Social Inversion 98 Offside Cinema 100 3 Political Modernism and Its Discontents 107 The Two Avant?]Gardes 108 The Brechtian Legacy 110 Beyond Brecht 120 The Affective?]Corporeal Turn 126 The Rediscovery of Pleasure 133 The Legacy of the V?]Effect 136 Political Cinema in the Age of the Posts 139 4 The Transmogrification of the Negative 145 An Aesthetic of Mistakes 146 Third Cinema: From Hunger to Garbage 148 Sublime Detritus 154 The Recombinant Sublime 158 Anthropophagic Modernism 161 Situationist Détournement 165 Culture Jamming 168 Neo?]Situationism and the Aesthetics of Failure 171 Media Jujitsu 175 The New Kino?]Eye: Vision Machines 178 5 Hybrid Variations on a Documentary Theme 185 The Fiction-Documentary Continuum 185 Murderous Reenactments 189 The Mediatic Spectrum 193 From Representation to Self?]Presentation 199 The Strategic Advantages of Hybridization 206 Performative Films 211 The Essay Film and Mockumentaries 215 6 Hollywood Aristotelianism, the Fractured Chronotope, and the Musicalization of Cinema 225 Hollywood Aristotelianism: the Orthodox Chronotope 225 Alternatives to Aristotle: the Menippean Strain 233 Pop Culture Anachronism and the Chronotope of the Road 239 Baroque Modernism and the Marvelous American Real 244 Trance?]Modernism 246 Contrapuntal Variations 251 Transformative Becomings 258 The Shape?]Shiftings of Popular Culture 266 Metaphysical Cine?]Poetry 268 7 Aesthetic/Political Innovation in the Digital Era 276 Beyond Accelerationism: Digital Montage and Duration 282 Tools of Engagement: Interactivity and Digital Détournement 285 IRL Subversions: Tactical Media and Digital Materialism 288 In Guise of a Conclusion 292 Index 298
Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 1 An Aesthetics of the Commons 29 The Aesthetic Commons 30 From Columbus to Indigenous Media 32 First Peoples, First Features 37 The Storytelling Commons 42 Revisionist Adaptation and the Literary Commons 47 Cultural Indigenization 53 The Archival Commons and the Ab?]original Musical 58 2 The Upside?]Down World of the Carnivalesque 68 The People's Second Life 68 Sacred Parody 72 Festive?]Revolutionary Practices 76 Unruly Women 79 Polymorphous Celebrations 83 Stand?]up Comedy and Nuclear Catastrophe 86 Contemporary Fools 90 Pedagogic Humor and Provocation 94 Tropes of Social Inversion 98 Offside Cinema 100 3 Political Modernism and Its Discontents 107 The Two Avant?]Gardes 108 The Brechtian Legacy 110 Beyond Brecht 120 The Affective?]Corporeal Turn 126 The Rediscovery of Pleasure 133 The Legacy of the V?]Effect 136 Political Cinema in the Age of the Posts 139 4 The Transmogrification of the Negative 145 An Aesthetic of Mistakes 146 Third Cinema: From Hunger to Garbage 148 Sublime Detritus 154 The Recombinant Sublime 158 Anthropophagic Modernism 161 Situationist Détournement 165 Culture Jamming 168 Neo?]Situationism and the Aesthetics of Failure 171 Media Jujitsu 175 The New Kino?]Eye: Vision Machines 178 5 Hybrid Variations on a Documentary Theme 185 The Fiction-Documentary Continuum 185 Murderous Reenactments 189 The Mediatic Spectrum 193 From Representation to Self?]Presentation 199 The Strategic Advantages of Hybridization 206 Performative Films 211 The Essay Film and Mockumentaries 215 6 Hollywood Aristotelianism, the Fractured Chronotope, and the Musicalization of Cinema 225 Hollywood Aristotelianism: the Orthodox Chronotope 225 Alternatives to Aristotle: the Menippean Strain 233 Pop Culture Anachronism and the Chronotope of the Road 239 Baroque Modernism and the Marvelous American Real 244 Trance?]Modernism 246 Contrapuntal Variations 251 Transformative Becomings 258 The Shape?]Shiftings of Popular Culture 266 Metaphysical Cine?]Poetry 268 7 Aesthetic/Political Innovation in the Digital Era 276 Beyond Accelerationism: Digital Montage and Duration 282 Tools of Engagement: Interactivity and Digital Détournement 285 IRL Subversions: Tactical Media and Digital Materialism 288 In Guise of a Conclusion 292 Index 298
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