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£39.99

In Praise of Cinematic Bastardy

Edited By: Sébastien Lefait, Philippe Ortoli

£39.99

Cinema is a bastard art, innovative through adulterous relationships and a blurred lineage. This book aims to rehabilitate the shadowy corners of cinematographic creation, providing a new way of using notions like reference, blending, and hybridity.

Cinema may be called a bastard art in both meanings of the word: because it is usually defined as a hybrid art form, obviously, but…
£39.99
£39.99
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Cinema may be called a bastard art in both meanings of the word: because it is usually defined as a hybrid art form, obviously, but also, and perhaps more importantly, because it has been able to become formally as well as generically innovative mostly through adulterous relationships, thus making illegitimacy its grounding principle by preferring a blurred lineage to a legible succession. Trying to find what film is referred to in a sequence, therefore, amounts to establishing a clear family tree, which takes no account of the illegitimate unions, natural children and forgotten ancestors that are nevertheless part and parcel of film history. If that quest should still be conducted, its object, it seems, should not be one sole point of reference. The aim of this book is to create the opportunity of studying, and perhaps of rehabilitating, those shadowy corners of cinematographic creation and film memory, and to provide film studies, but also literature and Arts studies altogether, with a newly productive way of using such familiar notions as difference, quotation, reference, blending, hybridity, miscegenation or crossbreeding.

Sébastien Lefait is Lecturer in English at the University of Corsica. Besides articles about films and about Shakespeare’s plays, he has published articles about the new forms of film adaptation. His current research focuses on the use of surveillance in films and TV series, in which he sees a socio-analytical instrument and an aesthetic tool. He is currently finishing a book on the subject, to be released in 2012.

Philippe Ortoli is Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Corsica, after teaching at university level at Paris VII, Poitiers, Aix-en-Provence and Lyons. A regular author of publications on film, he has just finished a volume, Le Musée imaginaire de Quentin Tarantino (Corlet/Cerf, 7ème art).

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-4438-3782-2
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-3782-8
  • Date of Publication: 2012-05-21

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-3863-2
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-3863-4
  • Date of Publication: 2012-05-21

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: APF, APFA, APFN
  • THEMA: ATF, ATFA, ATFN
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