The Oxford guide to film studies
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Oxford guide to film studies
Oxford University Press, 1998
1st ed
- : pbk
- Other Title
-
Oxford guide to film studies
Available at / 57 libraries
-
Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityグローバル専攻
: pbkCOE-SA||778||Hil||0100928101009281
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780198711155
Description
This text is a critical volume on the theories, debates, and approaches to the study of film. International experts provide an overview of the main disciplinary approaches to film studies, an explanation of the main concepts and methods involved in film analysis, a survey of the main issues and debates in the study of film, and critical discussion of key areas. The guide features comprehensive coverage suitable for many courses on cinema or film studies and is organized into three sections: "Approaches"; "Hollywood and the World"; and "World Cinema". There is an emphasis throughout on critical concepts, methods, and debates and specially commissioned chapters on such varied topics as film music, the Hollywood Star System, and the idea of national cinema are included. Coverage of important new areas in film studies are also included, for example: gay and lesbian criticism; postcolonial theory; audience studies; post-classical Hollywood cinema; and cultural studies, and there are also chapters discussing new developments in classical topics, such as Early Hollywood Cinema, Film History, and the avant-garde.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780198711247
Description
Comprehensive, authoritative, and unique, The Oxford Guide to Film Studies is the up-to-date critical volume on the theories, debates, and approaches to the study of film. A host of international experts provide an overview of the main disciplinary approaches to film studies, an explanation of the main concepts and methods involved in film analysis, a survey of the main issues and debates in the study of film, and critical discussion of key areas.
The Guide features:
* Comprehensive coverage suitable for any course on cinema or film studies
* Organized into three sections: Approaches; Hollywood and the World; World Cinema
* An emphasis throughout on critical concepts, methods, and debates
* Specially commissioned chapters on such varied topics as film music, the Hollywood Star System, and the idea of national cinema
* Coverage dedicated to important new areas in film studies: gay and lesbian criticism, postcolonial theory, audience studies, post-classical Hollywood cinema, and cultural studies
* Chapters discussing exciting new developments in classical topics, such as Early Hollywood Cinema, Film History, and the avant-garde
* Illustrated throughout, and complete with `readings' designed to demonstrate the variety of theoretical approaches, chapter headings and summaries, guides to further reading, and `highlight' quotes
With its uniquely comprehensive coverage, The Oxford Guide to Film Studies is an indispensable aide and reference source for the student of film and media, and anyone interested in the study of cinema.
Table of Contents
- General Introduction
- PART ONE: CRITICAL APPROACHES
- 1. Introduction to Film Studies
- STUDYING THE FILM TEXT
- 2. The Film Text and Film Form
- 3. Film Acting
- 4. Film Costume
- 5. Film Music
- THE FILM TEXT: THEORETICAL DEVELOPMENTS
- 6. Classic Film Theory and Semiotics
- 7. Formalism and Neo-formalism
- 8. Impressionism, Surrealism, and Film Theory
- 9. Film and Psychoanalysis
- 10. Post-Structuralism and Deconstruction
- 11. Film and Postmodernism
- FILM TEXT AND CONTEXT: GENDER, IDEOLOGY, AND IDENTITIES
- 12. Marxism and Film
- 13. Feminism and Film
- 14. Gay and Lesbian Criticism
- 15. Queer Theory
- 16. Pornography
- 17. Race, Ethnicity, and Film
- 18. Film and Cultural Identity
- FILM TEXT AND CONTEXT: CULTURE, HISTORY, AND RECEPTION
- 19. Film and History
- 20. Sociology and Film
- 21. Cultural Studies and Film
- 22. Film Audiences
- 23. Hermeneutics, Reception Aesthetics, and Film Interpretation
- PART TWO: AMERICAN CINEMA AND HOLLYWOOD: CRITICAL APPROACHES.
- AMERICAN CINEMA: HISTORY, INDUSTRY, AND INTERPRETATION
- 1. American Cinema and Film History
- 2. History and Cinema Technology
- 3. Hollywood as Industry
- 4. Early American Film
- 5. Classical Hollywood Film and Melodrama
- 6. Post-classical Hollywood
- CRITICAL CONCEPTS
- 7. Authorship and Hollywood
- 8. Genre and Hollywood
- 9. The Star System and Hollywood
- POLITICS AND SOCIETY
- 10. Hollywood Film and Society
- 11. Film Policy: Hollywood and Beyond
- 12. Hollywood and the World
- PART THREE: WORLD CINEMA: CRITICAL APPROACHES
- REDEFINING CINEMA: INTERNATIONAL AND AVANT-GARDE ALTERNATIVES
- 1. Concepts of National Cinema
- 2. Modernism and the Avante-Gardes
- 3. Realism, Modernism, and Post-Colonial
- REDEFINING CINEMA: OTHER GENRES
- 4. The Documentary Film
- 5. The Animated Film
- EUROPEAN CINEMA
- 6. Iss ues in European Cinema
- CASE-STUDIES: MOVEMENTS, MOMENTS, AND FILMMAKERS
- 7. The Avant-Gardes and European Cinema before 1930
- 8. Italian Post-War Cinema and Neo-Realism
- 9. The French Nouvelle Vague
- 10. New German Cinema
- 11. East-Central European Cinema
- 12. European Film Policy and the Response to Hollywood
- 13. Directors and Stars
- (a) Jean Renoir
- (b) Ingmar Bergman
- (c) Chantal Akerman
- (d) Pedro Almodovar
- (e) Luc Besson
- ANGLOPHONE NATIONAL CINEMAS
- CASE-STUDIES
- 14. British Cinema
- 15. Ireland and Cinema
- 16. Australian Cinema
- 17. Canadian Cinema
- WORLD CINEMA
- 18. Issues in World Cinema
- CASE-STUDIES: CINEMAS OF THE WORLD
- 19. Indian Cinema
- 20. Chinese Cinema
- 21(a) Hong Kong Cinema: Discovery and Pre-Discovery
- 21(b) China, and 1997
- 22. Taiwanese New Cinema
- 23. Japanese Cinema
- 25. South American Cinema
- FILM IN A CHANGING AGE
- 26. Film and Changing Technologies
- 27. Film and Television
by "Nielsen BookData"