World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2011-01-20
Publisher(s): Bloomsbury Academic
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Summary

World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism is a highly original study. It breaks away from the binary divisions which underpin most of film theory, and challenges traditional views of cinematic realism, drawing instead on the filmmaker's commitment to truth and to film's material bond with the real. Nagib conducts comparative case studies drawn from a wide range of realist trends, including the Japanese New Wave, the nouvelle vague, the Cinema Novo, the New German Cinema, the Inuit Indigenous Cinema, the Taiwan New Cinema and the New Brazilian Cinema. She reveals that these creative peaks are animated by the desire to reveal concealed or unknown political, social, psychological or mystical dimensions of reality - as observed in the various cycles of new waves and new cinemas across film history and geography. World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism is groundbreaking scholarship that surveys and defines World Cinema not as the opposite of Hollywood, but in positive terms; and draws upon the work of Badiou and Ranciere to take film theory in a bold new direction.

Author Biography

Lcia Nagib is Centenary Professor of World Cinemas at the University of Leeds.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsp. ix
Acknowledgementsp. xiii
Introductionp. 1
Realism, Presentation, Representationp. 3
Presentational Ethicsp. 8
Physical Cinema
The End of the Otherp. 19
Physical Realismp. 23
The Missing Otherp. 32
Atanarjuat, The Fast Runnerp. 34
Yaabap. 42
God and the Devil in the Land of the Sun (Black God, White Devil)p. 51
The 400 Blowsp. 64
The Immaterial Difference: Werner Herzog Revisitedp. 74
The Excessive Bodyp. 74
Literal Differencep. 82
Physical Differencep. 93
Representational Differencep. 103
The Reality of the Medium
Conceptual Realism in Land in Trance and I Am Cubap. 125
Allegorical Realp. 131
Reality as Process: Trance in Land in Trancep. 138
Trance, Sexuality and the Christian Myth in I Am Cubap. 143
Mimesis of the Principlep. 148
Concluding Remarksp. 155
The Work of Art in Progress: An Analysis of Delicate Crimep. 157
The Ethics of Desire
The Realm of the Senses, the Ethical Imperative and the Politics of Pleasurep. 177
Originality, Beauty and the Porn Genrep. 181
The Eroticized Nationp. 187
Sex in Red and White: Double Suicidep. 193
Anti-realism and Artistic Realp. 198
The Participative Voyeur and the Eroticized Apparatusp. 203
The Production of Reality
Hara and Kobayashi's 'Private Documentaries'p. 219
Historical Timep. 220
Phenomenological Timep. 226
Active Subjectsp. 231
The Self-Performing Auteur: Ethics in João César Monteirop. 236
Ethics of the Impossible Realp. 238
God's Autobiographyp. 246
The History Manp. 255
Notesp. 262
Bibliographyp. 267
Indexp. 279
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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