The Routledge International Handbook of Jungian Film Studies (eBook, PDF)
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The Routledge International Handbook of Jungian Film Studies (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Hockley, Luke
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The Routledge International Handbook of Jungian Film Studies weaves together the various strands of Jungian film theory, revealing a coherent theoretical position underpinning this exciting recent area of research, while also exploring and suggesting new directions for further study.
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TheRoutledge International Handbook of Jungian Film Studies weaves together the various strands of Jungian film theory, revealing a coherent theoretical position underpinning this exciting recent area of research, while also exploring and suggesting new directions for further study.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317213123
- Artikelnr.: 57603582
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 490
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317213123
- Artikelnr.: 57603582
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Luke Hockley is Research Professor of Media Analysis at the University of Bedfordshire, UK. He is a practising psychotherapist and is registered with the United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP). Luke is joint Editor in Chief of the International Journal of Jungian Studies (IJJS) and Series Editor for Jung the Essential Guides (Routledge). His recent publications include: Jungian Film Studies: the Essential Guide (Routledge, 2016; co-authored with Helena Bassil-Morozow) and Somatic Cinema: the relationship between body and screen, a Jungian perspective. www.lukehockley.com
List of Contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction, Luke Hockley; 1) A
Jungian textual terroir, Catriona Miller; 2) Dionysus and textuality:
Hockley's somatic cinema for a transdisciplinary film studies, Susan
Rowland; 3)Stick to the image? No thanks! Eric Greene; 4) Archetypal
possibilities: meta-representations, a critique of von Franz interpretation
of fairy tale genre focusing on Jean Cocteau's retelling of The Beauty and
the Beast, Leslie Gardner; 5) Human Beans and the flight from otherness:
Jungian constructions of gender in film, Phil Goss; 6) It's alive: The
evolving archetypal image and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Elizabeth
Nelson; 7) Music in film: Its functions as image, Benjamin Nagari; 8)
Psychological images and multimodality in Boyhood and Birdman, Shara
Knight; 9) Feminist film criticism: Towards a Jungian approach', Helena
Bassil-Morozow; 10) Teaching Jung in the academy: The representation of
comic book heroes on the big screen, Kevin Lu; 11) Horror and the sublime:
Psychology, transcendence and the role of terror, Christopher Hauke; 12)
Hungry children and starving fathers: auteurist notions of father hunger in
American Beauty, Toby Reynolds; 13)Beyond the male hero myth in Clint
Eastwood films, Steve Myers; 14) True detective and Jung's four steps of
transformation, Stephen Anthony Farah; 15) Film futuristics: A forecasting
methodology, Michael Glock; 16) The Australian lost child complex in
adaptation: Kurzel's Macbeth and Stone's The daughter, Terrie Waddell;
17)Numinous images of a new ethic: A Jungian eiew of Kieslowski's The
decalogue, Judith R. Cooper and August J. Cwik; 18) The han cultural
complex: Embodied experiences of trauma in New Korean Cinema, Amalya Layla
Ashman; 19) The outsider protagonist in American film, Glen Slater; 20)
Spirited Away and its depiction of Japanese traditional culture, Megumi
Yama; 21)Cold comforts: Psychical and cultural schisms in The Bridge and
Fortitude, Alec Charles; 22)Cultural hegemonies of forms and
representations: Russian fairy tale women and Post-Jungian thought, Nadi
Fadina; 23) Feeling film: Time, space and the third image, Luke Hockley;
24)Getting your own pain: A personal account of healing dissociation with
help from the film War Horse, Donald E. Kalsched; 25) Healing the holes in
time: Film and the art of trauma, Angela Connolly; 26) Discovering the
meaning of a film, John Beebe ; 27)Under the skin: Images as the language
of the unconscious, Joanna Dovalis and John Izod; 28) Beyond the second
screen: Enantiodromia and the running-together of connected viewing, Greg
Singh; 29) Anima ludus: Analytical psychology, phenomenology and digital
games, Steve Conway; 30) Cinema without a cinema and film without film: the
psychogeography of contemporary media consumption, Aaron Balick; 31)
Digital media as textual theory: Audiovisual, pictorial and data analyses
of Alien and Aliens, Andrew McWhirter; 32) A networked imagination:
Myth-making in fan fic's story and soul, Leigh Melander; 33) The unlived
lives of cinema: Post-cinematic doubling, imitation and supplementarity,
Kelli Fuery
Jungian textual terroir, Catriona Miller; 2) Dionysus and textuality:
Hockley's somatic cinema for a transdisciplinary film studies, Susan
Rowland; 3)Stick to the image? No thanks! Eric Greene; 4) Archetypal
possibilities: meta-representations, a critique of von Franz interpretation
of fairy tale genre focusing on Jean Cocteau's retelling of The Beauty and
the Beast, Leslie Gardner; 5) Human Beans and the flight from otherness:
Jungian constructions of gender in film, Phil Goss; 6) It's alive: The
evolving archetypal image and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Elizabeth
Nelson; 7) Music in film: Its functions as image, Benjamin Nagari; 8)
Psychological images and multimodality in Boyhood and Birdman, Shara
Knight; 9) Feminist film criticism: Towards a Jungian approach', Helena
Bassil-Morozow; 10) Teaching Jung in the academy: The representation of
comic book heroes on the big screen, Kevin Lu; 11) Horror and the sublime:
Psychology, transcendence and the role of terror, Christopher Hauke; 12)
Hungry children and starving fathers: auteurist notions of father hunger in
American Beauty, Toby Reynolds; 13)Beyond the male hero myth in Clint
Eastwood films, Steve Myers; 14) True detective and Jung's four steps of
transformation, Stephen Anthony Farah; 15) Film futuristics: A forecasting
methodology, Michael Glock; 16) The Australian lost child complex in
adaptation: Kurzel's Macbeth and Stone's The daughter, Terrie Waddell;
17)Numinous images of a new ethic: A Jungian eiew of Kieslowski's The
decalogue, Judith R. Cooper and August J. Cwik; 18) The han cultural
complex: Embodied experiences of trauma in New Korean Cinema, Amalya Layla
Ashman; 19) The outsider protagonist in American film, Glen Slater; 20)
Spirited Away and its depiction of Japanese traditional culture, Megumi
Yama; 21)Cold comforts: Psychical and cultural schisms in The Bridge and
Fortitude, Alec Charles; 22)Cultural hegemonies of forms and
representations: Russian fairy tale women and Post-Jungian thought, Nadi
Fadina; 23) Feeling film: Time, space and the third image, Luke Hockley;
24)Getting your own pain: A personal account of healing dissociation with
help from the film War Horse, Donald E. Kalsched; 25) Healing the holes in
time: Film and the art of trauma, Angela Connolly; 26) Discovering the
meaning of a film, John Beebe ; 27)Under the skin: Images as the language
of the unconscious, Joanna Dovalis and John Izod; 28) Beyond the second
screen: Enantiodromia and the running-together of connected viewing, Greg
Singh; 29) Anima ludus: Analytical psychology, phenomenology and digital
games, Steve Conway; 30) Cinema without a cinema and film without film: the
psychogeography of contemporary media consumption, Aaron Balick; 31)
Digital media as textual theory: Audiovisual, pictorial and data analyses
of Alien and Aliens, Andrew McWhirter; 32) A networked imagination:
Myth-making in fan fic's story and soul, Leigh Melander; 33) The unlived
lives of cinema: Post-cinematic doubling, imitation and supplementarity,
Kelli Fuery
List of Contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction, Luke Hockley; 1) A
Jungian textual terroir, Catriona Miller; 2) Dionysus and textuality:
Hockley's somatic cinema for a transdisciplinary film studies, Susan
Rowland; 3)Stick to the image? No thanks! Eric Greene; 4) Archetypal
possibilities: meta-representations, a critique of von Franz interpretation
of fairy tale genre focusing on Jean Cocteau's retelling of The Beauty and
the Beast, Leslie Gardner; 5) Human Beans and the flight from otherness:
Jungian constructions of gender in film, Phil Goss; 6) It's alive: The
evolving archetypal image and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Elizabeth
Nelson; 7) Music in film: Its functions as image, Benjamin Nagari; 8)
Psychological images and multimodality in Boyhood and Birdman, Shara
Knight; 9) Feminist film criticism: Towards a Jungian approach', Helena
Bassil-Morozow; 10) Teaching Jung in the academy: The representation of
comic book heroes on the big screen, Kevin Lu; 11) Horror and the sublime:
Psychology, transcendence and the role of terror, Christopher Hauke; 12)
Hungry children and starving fathers: auteurist notions of father hunger in
American Beauty, Toby Reynolds; 13)Beyond the male hero myth in Clint
Eastwood films, Steve Myers; 14) True detective and Jung's four steps of
transformation, Stephen Anthony Farah; 15) Film futuristics: A forecasting
methodology, Michael Glock; 16) The Australian lost child complex in
adaptation: Kurzel's Macbeth and Stone's The daughter, Terrie Waddell;
17)Numinous images of a new ethic: A Jungian eiew of Kieslowski's The
decalogue, Judith R. Cooper and August J. Cwik; 18) The han cultural
complex: Embodied experiences of trauma in New Korean Cinema, Amalya Layla
Ashman; 19) The outsider protagonist in American film, Glen Slater; 20)
Spirited Away and its depiction of Japanese traditional culture, Megumi
Yama; 21)Cold comforts: Psychical and cultural schisms in The Bridge and
Fortitude, Alec Charles; 22)Cultural hegemonies of forms and
representations: Russian fairy tale women and Post-Jungian thought, Nadi
Fadina; 23) Feeling film: Time, space and the third image, Luke Hockley;
24)Getting your own pain: A personal account of healing dissociation with
help from the film War Horse, Donald E. Kalsched; 25) Healing the holes in
time: Film and the art of trauma, Angela Connolly; 26) Discovering the
meaning of a film, John Beebe ; 27)Under the skin: Images as the language
of the unconscious, Joanna Dovalis and John Izod; 28) Beyond the second
screen: Enantiodromia and the running-together of connected viewing, Greg
Singh; 29) Anima ludus: Analytical psychology, phenomenology and digital
games, Steve Conway; 30) Cinema without a cinema and film without film: the
psychogeography of contemporary media consumption, Aaron Balick; 31)
Digital media as textual theory: Audiovisual, pictorial and data analyses
of Alien and Aliens, Andrew McWhirter; 32) A networked imagination:
Myth-making in fan fic's story and soul, Leigh Melander; 33) The unlived
lives of cinema: Post-cinematic doubling, imitation and supplementarity,
Kelli Fuery
Jungian textual terroir, Catriona Miller; 2) Dionysus and textuality:
Hockley's somatic cinema for a transdisciplinary film studies, Susan
Rowland; 3)Stick to the image? No thanks! Eric Greene; 4) Archetypal
possibilities: meta-representations, a critique of von Franz interpretation
of fairy tale genre focusing on Jean Cocteau's retelling of The Beauty and
the Beast, Leslie Gardner; 5) Human Beans and the flight from otherness:
Jungian constructions of gender in film, Phil Goss; 6) It's alive: The
evolving archetypal image and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Elizabeth
Nelson; 7) Music in film: Its functions as image, Benjamin Nagari; 8)
Psychological images and multimodality in Boyhood and Birdman, Shara
Knight; 9) Feminist film criticism: Towards a Jungian approach', Helena
Bassil-Morozow; 10) Teaching Jung in the academy: The representation of
comic book heroes on the big screen, Kevin Lu; 11) Horror and the sublime:
Psychology, transcendence and the role of terror, Christopher Hauke; 12)
Hungry children and starving fathers: auteurist notions of father hunger in
American Beauty, Toby Reynolds; 13)Beyond the male hero myth in Clint
Eastwood films, Steve Myers; 14) True detective and Jung's four steps of
transformation, Stephen Anthony Farah; 15) Film futuristics: A forecasting
methodology, Michael Glock; 16) The Australian lost child complex in
adaptation: Kurzel's Macbeth and Stone's The daughter, Terrie Waddell;
17)Numinous images of a new ethic: A Jungian eiew of Kieslowski's The
decalogue, Judith R. Cooper and August J. Cwik; 18) The han cultural
complex: Embodied experiences of trauma in New Korean Cinema, Amalya Layla
Ashman; 19) The outsider protagonist in American film, Glen Slater; 20)
Spirited Away and its depiction of Japanese traditional culture, Megumi
Yama; 21)Cold comforts: Psychical and cultural schisms in The Bridge and
Fortitude, Alec Charles; 22)Cultural hegemonies of forms and
representations: Russian fairy tale women and Post-Jungian thought, Nadi
Fadina; 23) Feeling film: Time, space and the third image, Luke Hockley;
24)Getting your own pain: A personal account of healing dissociation with
help from the film War Horse, Donald E. Kalsched; 25) Healing the holes in
time: Film and the art of trauma, Angela Connolly; 26) Discovering the
meaning of a film, John Beebe ; 27)Under the skin: Images as the language
of the unconscious, Joanna Dovalis and John Izod; 28) Beyond the second
screen: Enantiodromia and the running-together of connected viewing, Greg
Singh; 29) Anima ludus: Analytical psychology, phenomenology and digital
games, Steve Conway; 30) Cinema without a cinema and film without film: the
psychogeography of contemporary media consumption, Aaron Balick; 31)
Digital media as textual theory: Audiovisual, pictorial and data analyses
of Alien and Aliens, Andrew McWhirter; 32) A networked imagination:
Myth-making in fan fic's story and soul, Leigh Melander; 33) The unlived
lives of cinema: Post-cinematic doubling, imitation and supplementarity,
Kelli Fuery