| Preface, |
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xv | |
| I Film Language |
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1 | (134) |
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7 | (6) |
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Beyond the Shot [The Cinematographic Principle and the Ideogram], |
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13 | (10) |
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The Dramaturgy of Film Form [The Dialectical Approach to Film Form], |
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23 | (18) |
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The Evolution of the Language of Cinema, |
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41 | (13) |
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Toward a Non-Bourgeois Camera Style, |
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54 | (11) |
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Some Points in the Semiotics of the Cinema, |
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65 | (7) |
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Problems of Denotation in the Fiction Film, |
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72 | (15) |
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The Discourse of Pictures: Iconicity and Film Studies, |
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87 | (19) |
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The Tutor-Code of Classical Cinema, |
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106 | (12) |
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The Spectator-in-the-Text: The Rhetoric of Stagecoach, |
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118 | (17) |
| II Film and Reality |
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135 | (148) |
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From Theory of Film Basic Concepts, |
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143 | (11) |
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From From Caligari to Hitler The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, |
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154 | (12) |
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The Ontology of the Photographic Image, |
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166 | (4) |
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The Myth of Total Cinema, |
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170 | (4) |
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De Sica: Metteur-en-scene, |
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174 | (9) |
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183 | (4) |
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Cinematography: The Creative Use of Reality, |
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187 | (12) |
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From Metaphors on Vision, |
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199 | (7) |
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The Apparatus: Metapsychological Approaches to the Impression of Reality in Cinema, |
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206 | (18) |
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Jean-Louis Baudry and "The Apparatus," |
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224 | (16) |
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From Cinema I and Cinema 2 |
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Preface to the English Edition, |
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240 | (2) |
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The Origin of the Crisis: Italian Neo-realism and the French New Wave, |
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242 | (8) |
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Beyond the Movement-Image, |
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250 | (20) |
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True Lies: Perceptual Realism, Digital Images, and Film Theory, |
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270 | (13) |
| III The Film Medium: Image and Sound |
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283 | (122) |
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Style and Medium in the Motion Pictures, |
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289 | (14) |
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The Establishment of Physical Existence, |
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303 | (11) |
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314 | (1) |
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315 | (7) |
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322 | (4) |
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326 | (6) |
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From Philosophical Problems of Classical Film Theory |
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332 | (7) |
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339 | (5) |
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344 | (1) |
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Audience, Actor, and Star, |
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345 | (2) |
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347 | (5) |
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352 | (3) |
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Ideological Effects of the Basic Cinematographic Apparatus, |
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355 | (11) |
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366 | (4) |
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SERGEI EISENSTEIN, VSEVOLOD PUDOVKIN, AND GRIGORI ALEXANDROV |
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370 | (3) |
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The Voice in the Cinema: The Articulation of Body and Space, |
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373 | (13) |
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Technology and Aesthetics of Film Sound, |
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386 | (9) |
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Broadcast TV as Sound and Image, |
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395 | (10) |
| IV Film Narrative and the Other Arts |
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405 | (150) |
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From The Film: A Psychological Study |
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The Means of the Photoplay, |
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411 | (7) |
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418 | (11) |
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From The World in a Frame |
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Acting: Stage vs. Screen, |
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429 | (7) |
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Dickens, Griffith, and Ourselves [Dickens, Griffith, and Film Today], |
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436 | (9) |
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What Novels Can Do That Films Can't (and Vice Versa), |
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445 | (16) |
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From Concepts in Film Theory |
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461 | (9) |
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Narrative Discourse and the Narrator System, |
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470 | (12) |
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Film Music and Narrative Agency, |
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482 | (31) |
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The Concept of Cinematic Excess, |
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513 | (12) |
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Godard and Counter Cinema: Vent d'Est, |
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525 | (9) |
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'Trashing' the Academy: Taste, Excess, and an Emerging Politics of Cinematic Style, |
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534 | (21) |
| V The Film Artist |
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555 | (102) |
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Notes on the Auteur Theory in 1962, |
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561 | (4) |
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From Signs and Meaning in the Cinema |
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565 | (16) |
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How Howard Hawks Brought Baby Up: An Apologia for the Studio System, |
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581 | (8) |
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589 | (3) |
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592 | (6) |
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Stars as a Cinematic Phenomenon, |
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598 | (8) |
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From Film History: Theory and Practice |
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The Role of the Star in Film History [Joan Crawford], |
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606 | (14) |
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From From Reverence to Rape |
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Female stars of the 1940's, |
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620 | (14) |
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Pleasure, Ambivalence, Identification |
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Valentino and Female Spectatorship, |
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634 | (18) |
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From The Genius of the System |
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"The Whole Equation of Pictures," |
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652 | (5) |
| VI Film Genres |
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657 | (126) |
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From The World in a Frame |
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Genre: The Conventions of Connection, |
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663 | (17) |
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A Semantic/Syntactic Approach to Film Genre, |
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680 | (11) |
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Film Genre and the Genre Film, |
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691 | (12) |
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Movie Chronicle: The Westerner, |
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703 | (14) |
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717 | (10) |
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Film Bodies: Gender, Genre, and Excess, |
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727 | (15) |
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Feminist Frameworks for Horror Films, |
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742 | (22) |
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The Terror of Pleasure: The Contemporary Horror Film and Postmodern Theory, |
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764 | (10) |
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The Art Cinema as a Mode of Film Practice, |
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774 | (9) |
| VII Film: Psychology, Ideology, and Technology |
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783 | (144) |
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The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, |
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791 | (21) |
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JEAN-LUC COMOLLI AND JEAN NARBONI |
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Cinema/Ideology/Criticism, |
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812 | (8) |
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From The Imaginary Signifier |
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820 | (7) |
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The Passion for Perceiving, |
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827 | (4) |
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831 | (6) |
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Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, |
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837 | (12) |
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From The Women Who Knew Too Much: Hitchcock and Feminist Theory |
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The Master's Dollhouse: Rear Window, |
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849 | |
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An Aesthetic of Astonishment: Early Film and the (In)Credulous Spectator, |
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862 | (15) |
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ROBERT STAM AND LOUISE SPENCE |
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Colonialism, Racism, and Representation: An Introduction, |
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877 | (15) |
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Black Spectatorship: Problems of Identification and Resistance, |
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892 | (9) |
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Digital Cinema: A False Revolution, |
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901 | (13) |
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The End of Cinema: Multimedia and Technological Change, |
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914 | (13) |
| Index, |
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927 | |