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£39.99

Narration and Spectatorship in Moving Images

Edited By: Barbara Fisher Anderson, Joseph D. Anderson

£39.99

Film scholars, drawing upon psychology, analyze the connections between stylistic patterns and aesthetic effects. This selection of essays focuses on elements of filmic narration to gain tangible insight into the ancient mystery of the link between art and experience.

Philosophers and students of the arts have wondered since the time of Aristotle about the nature of aesthetic experience, and how this experience can seemingly…
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Philosophers and students of the arts have wondered since the time of Aristotle about the nature of aesthetic experience, and how this experience can seemingly be evoked by works of art. For more than a century producers and directors of motion pictures have made decisions about how to craft them based upon assumptions about complex stylistic devices and the effects such patterns of organization have on viewers. Over the past few years film scholars have made considerable progress in analyzing the manifold connections that exist between stylistic patterns and aesthetic effects for moving images of all kinds. In doing so, they have increasingly drawn upon insights and methodologies derived from psychology. The international conference from which this volume takes its contributions and its title, was organized to encourage the seeking of descriptive models pertaining to those elements of filmic construction that account for specific aesthetic experience. The focus of the current selection of twenty essays is therefore on the elements of filmic narration and their presumed aesthetic effects. The editors are pleased to strengthen the link between film studies and psychology in the interest of gaining tangible insight into the ancient mystery of the link between art and aesthetic experience.

Joseph D. Anderson is Founding Director of the Society for Cognitive Studies of the Moving Image, and author of The Reality of Illusion: An Ecological Approach to Cognitive Film Theory (1996) and co-editor of Moving Image Theory: Ecological Considerations (2005). He is Chair of the Department of Mass Communication and Theatre at the University of Central Arkansas.

Barbara Fisher Anderson served as Managing Director of the Center for Cognitive Studies of the Moving Image from its founding in 1995 until 2006. She is co-author of “The Case for an Ecological Metatheory” in Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies (1996) and co-editor of Moving Image Theory: Ecological Considerations (2005).

Joseph Anderson, Henry Bacon, Daniel Barratt, Anne Bartsch, Robin Curtis, Charles Eidsvik, Kathrin Falenbrach, Torben Grodal, Bruce Hutchinson, Nikolai Khrenov, Rolf Kloepfer, Mette Kramer, Manana Machabelli, Nadezda Mankovskaya, Codruta Morari, Tamas Polya, Kevin Sweeney, Casper Tybjerg, Margrethe Bruun Vaage, Aleksander Vaijamae, Peter Wuss

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-309-3
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-309-5
  • Date of Publication: 2007-10-15

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-0921-7
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-0921-4
  • Date of Publication: 2007-10-15

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: APFA
  • THEMA: ATFA
281