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"A significant and original contribution, not just to Akerman scholarship, but to film studies generally."--David James, University of Southern California
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"A significant and original contribution, not just to Akerman scholarship, but to film studies generally."--David James, University of Southern California
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Duke University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Februar 1996
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 159mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 686g
- ISBN-13: 9780822317265
- ISBN-10: 0822317265
- Artikelnr.: 22269998
- Verlag: Duke University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Februar 1996
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 159mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 686g
- ISBN-13: 9780822317265
- ISBN-10: 0822317265
- Artikelnr.: 22269998
Ivone Margulies is Associate Professor in the Department of Film & Media at Hunter College of the City University of New York.
Acknowledgments ix
Chantal Akerman's Films: The Politics of the Singular 1
1. Nothing Happens: Time for the Everyday in Postwar Realist Cinema 21
Charting the Everyday in Postwar Europe 24
A Realism of Surfaces: Bazin and Neorealist Film 27
From Surface to Structure: Barthes, Godard, and the Textualization of
Reality 33
Beyond Cinematic Postivism: The Antirescue Cinema of Andy Warhol 36
2. Toward a Corporeal Cinema: Theatricality in the '70s 42
The United States in Real Time: Minimal, Hyperreal, and Structural 48
Quotation Reconsidered: European "Theatrical" Cinema 54
3. The Equivalence of Events: Jeanne DIelman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080
Bruxelles 65
Excess Description: Robbe-Grillet and Cinematic Hyperrealism 69
Bracketing Drama: The Other Scene 73
The Murder, and, and, and . . . : An Aesthetics of Homogeneity 80
The Automaton: Agency and Causality in Jeanne Dielman 88
4. Expanding the "I": Character in Experimental Feminist Narrative 100
The Lure of Center in Rainer's Work: A Cautionary Tale 104
The Eroded Index: Liminality in Je tu il elle 109
An Alogical, Fitful, Evidence 112
"Here Is": Redundant Description 118
A Mock Centrality: An A-individual Singularity 121
5. "Her" and Jeanne Dielman: Type as Commerce 128
For Example, "Her": Godard and the "Natural" Sign 131
Jeanne Dielman: An Exceptional Typicality 140
6. Forms of Address: Epistolary Performance, Monologue, and Bla Bla Bla 149
Epistolary Performance: News from Home 150
Talk Blocks: Meetings with Anna 154
Postscript: The Man with the Suitcase and A Filmmaker's Letter 161
What is Wrong with Signing? A Filmmaker's Letter 166
7. The Rhythm of Cliché: Akerman into the '90s 171
Eight Times "Oui": Singularity in Toute une nuit 173
Night and Day and Night: The Cycle Revisited 182
So Let's Sing: The Eighties and Window Shopping 185
Echoes from the East: Histoires D'Amérique and D'est 192
To Conclude: It Is Time 204
Filmography 213
Notes 215
Bibliography 247
Index 263
Chantal Akerman's Films: The Politics of the Singular 1
1. Nothing Happens: Time for the Everyday in Postwar Realist Cinema 21
Charting the Everyday in Postwar Europe 24
A Realism of Surfaces: Bazin and Neorealist Film 27
From Surface to Structure: Barthes, Godard, and the Textualization of
Reality 33
Beyond Cinematic Postivism: The Antirescue Cinema of Andy Warhol 36
2. Toward a Corporeal Cinema: Theatricality in the '70s 42
The United States in Real Time: Minimal, Hyperreal, and Structural 48
Quotation Reconsidered: European "Theatrical" Cinema 54
3. The Equivalence of Events: Jeanne DIelman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080
Bruxelles 65
Excess Description: Robbe-Grillet and Cinematic Hyperrealism 69
Bracketing Drama: The Other Scene 73
The Murder, and, and, and . . . : An Aesthetics of Homogeneity 80
The Automaton: Agency and Causality in Jeanne Dielman 88
4. Expanding the "I": Character in Experimental Feminist Narrative 100
The Lure of Center in Rainer's Work: A Cautionary Tale 104
The Eroded Index: Liminality in Je tu il elle 109
An Alogical, Fitful, Evidence 112
"Here Is": Redundant Description 118
A Mock Centrality: An A-individual Singularity 121
5. "Her" and Jeanne Dielman: Type as Commerce 128
For Example, "Her": Godard and the "Natural" Sign 131
Jeanne Dielman: An Exceptional Typicality 140
6. Forms of Address: Epistolary Performance, Monologue, and Bla Bla Bla 149
Epistolary Performance: News from Home 150
Talk Blocks: Meetings with Anna 154
Postscript: The Man with the Suitcase and A Filmmaker's Letter 161
What is Wrong with Signing? A Filmmaker's Letter 166
7. The Rhythm of Cliché: Akerman into the '90s 171
Eight Times "Oui": Singularity in Toute une nuit 173
Night and Day and Night: The Cycle Revisited 182
So Let's Sing: The Eighties and Window Shopping 185
Echoes from the East: Histoires D'Amérique and D'est 192
To Conclude: It Is Time 204
Filmography 213
Notes 215
Bibliography 247
Index 263
Acknowledgments ix
Chantal Akerman's Films: The Politics of the Singular 1
1. Nothing Happens: Time for the Everyday in Postwar Realist Cinema 21
Charting the Everyday in Postwar Europe 24
A Realism of Surfaces: Bazin and Neorealist Film 27
From Surface to Structure: Barthes, Godard, and the Textualization of
Reality 33
Beyond Cinematic Postivism: The Antirescue Cinema of Andy Warhol 36
2. Toward a Corporeal Cinema: Theatricality in the '70s 42
The United States in Real Time: Minimal, Hyperreal, and Structural 48
Quotation Reconsidered: European "Theatrical" Cinema 54
3. The Equivalence of Events: Jeanne DIelman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080
Bruxelles 65
Excess Description: Robbe-Grillet and Cinematic Hyperrealism 69
Bracketing Drama: The Other Scene 73
The Murder, and, and, and . . . : An Aesthetics of Homogeneity 80
The Automaton: Agency and Causality in Jeanne Dielman 88
4. Expanding the "I": Character in Experimental Feminist Narrative 100
The Lure of Center in Rainer's Work: A Cautionary Tale 104
The Eroded Index: Liminality in Je tu il elle 109
An Alogical, Fitful, Evidence 112
"Here Is": Redundant Description 118
A Mock Centrality: An A-individual Singularity 121
5. "Her" and Jeanne Dielman: Type as Commerce 128
For Example, "Her": Godard and the "Natural" Sign 131
Jeanne Dielman: An Exceptional Typicality 140
6. Forms of Address: Epistolary Performance, Monologue, and Bla Bla Bla 149
Epistolary Performance: News from Home 150
Talk Blocks: Meetings with Anna 154
Postscript: The Man with the Suitcase and A Filmmaker's Letter 161
What is Wrong with Signing? A Filmmaker's Letter 166
7. The Rhythm of Cliché: Akerman into the '90s 171
Eight Times "Oui": Singularity in Toute une nuit 173
Night and Day and Night: The Cycle Revisited 182
So Let's Sing: The Eighties and Window Shopping 185
Echoes from the East: Histoires D'Amérique and D'est 192
To Conclude: It Is Time 204
Filmography 213
Notes 215
Bibliography 247
Index 263
Chantal Akerman's Films: The Politics of the Singular 1
1. Nothing Happens: Time for the Everyday in Postwar Realist Cinema 21
Charting the Everyday in Postwar Europe 24
A Realism of Surfaces: Bazin and Neorealist Film 27
From Surface to Structure: Barthes, Godard, and the Textualization of
Reality 33
Beyond Cinematic Postivism: The Antirescue Cinema of Andy Warhol 36
2. Toward a Corporeal Cinema: Theatricality in the '70s 42
The United States in Real Time: Minimal, Hyperreal, and Structural 48
Quotation Reconsidered: European "Theatrical" Cinema 54
3. The Equivalence of Events: Jeanne DIelman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080
Bruxelles 65
Excess Description: Robbe-Grillet and Cinematic Hyperrealism 69
Bracketing Drama: The Other Scene 73
The Murder, and, and, and . . . : An Aesthetics of Homogeneity 80
The Automaton: Agency and Causality in Jeanne Dielman 88
4. Expanding the "I": Character in Experimental Feminist Narrative 100
The Lure of Center in Rainer's Work: A Cautionary Tale 104
The Eroded Index: Liminality in Je tu il elle 109
An Alogical, Fitful, Evidence 112
"Here Is": Redundant Description 118
A Mock Centrality: An A-individual Singularity 121
5. "Her" and Jeanne Dielman: Type as Commerce 128
For Example, "Her": Godard and the "Natural" Sign 131
Jeanne Dielman: An Exceptional Typicality 140
6. Forms of Address: Epistolary Performance, Monologue, and Bla Bla Bla 149
Epistolary Performance: News from Home 150
Talk Blocks: Meetings with Anna 154
Postscript: The Man with the Suitcase and A Filmmaker's Letter 161
What is Wrong with Signing? A Filmmaker's Letter 166
7. The Rhythm of Cliché: Akerman into the '90s 171
Eight Times "Oui": Singularity in Toute une nuit 173
Night and Day and Night: The Cycle Revisited 182
So Let's Sing: The Eighties and Window Shopping 185
Echoes from the East: Histoires D'Amérique and D'est 192
To Conclude: It Is Time 204
Filmography 213
Notes 215
Bibliography 247
Index 263