The human face is a privileged arena of expressivity; yet, this book suggests, cinema's most radical encounters with the face give rise to ambiguity, illegibility¿an equivocation between image and language. Braiding theoretical and aesthetic considerations with close analysis of films, Steimatsky interrogates the convergence of archaic powers and modern anxieties in our experience of the face on film.
The human face is a privileged arena of expressivity; yet, this book suggests, cinema's most radical encounters with the face give rise to ambiguity, illegibility¿an equivocation between image and language. Braiding theoretical and aesthetic considerations with close analysis of films, Steimatsky interrogates the convergence of archaic powers and modern anxieties in our experience of the face on film.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Noa Steimatsky is Visiting Associate Professor of Italian Studies at the University of California--Berkeley.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Acknowledgements Preface: Face Moving Image A Dispositif An Ur-Image The Face Against the Image Itineraries Chapter One: We Had Faces, Then Expressivity in the 1920s Joan of Arc, Inevitably The Face and its Voices Glamour/Anti-Glamour Chapter Two: Roland Barthes Looks at the Stars Towards "Visages et Figures," and circa 1953 Excursus on the Face in Language Into the Movie Theater Ultra-Face Excursus on the Mask From Cult to Charm: Funny Face Chapter Three: Face-to-Face (with The Wrong Man) What Godard Saw What the Clerk Saw Excursus on Anthropometrics Not a Mirror, Not a Lamp Chapter Four: Pass/Fail: Screen Test, Apparatus, Subject The Antonioni Screen Test Excursus on the Portrait Sitting for the Portrait is the Portrait Outer and Inner Space, and the Pathos of Time Fail Better Chapter Five: In Reticence (Bresson) The Epidermal and the Written The Image Against the Face Not an Open Book, but a Door Ajar Postface: The Two-Shot
Table of Contents Acknowledgements Preface: Face Moving Image A Dispositif An Ur-Image The Face Against the Image Itineraries Chapter One: We Had Faces, Then Expressivity in the 1920s Joan of Arc, Inevitably The Face and its Voices Glamour/Anti-Glamour Chapter Two: Roland Barthes Looks at the Stars Towards "Visages et Figures," and circa 1953 Excursus on the Face in Language Into the Movie Theater Ultra-Face Excursus on the Mask From Cult to Charm: Funny Face Chapter Three: Face-to-Face (with The Wrong Man) What Godard Saw What the Clerk Saw Excursus on Anthropometrics Not a Mirror, Not a Lamp Chapter Four: Pass/Fail: Screen Test, Apparatus, Subject The Antonioni Screen Test Excursus on the Portrait Sitting for the Portrait is the Portrait Outer and Inner Space, and the Pathos of Time Fail Better Chapter Five: In Reticence (Bresson) The Epidermal and the Written The Image Against the Face Not an Open Book, but a Door Ajar Postface: The Two-Shot
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