Image for Complicating Articulation in Art Cinema

Complicating Articulation in Art Cinema

Part of the Oxford English Monographs series
See all formats and editions

Complicating Articulation in Art Cinema argues that art cinema draws attention to its disjointed, multi-parted form, but that criticism has too frequently sought to explain this complexity away by stitching the parts together in totalizing readings.

This stitching together has often relied on the assumption that the solution to art cinema's puzzles lies in interpreting each film as the expression of a focalizing character's internal disturbance.

This bookchallenges this assumption. It argues that the attempt to explain formal complexity through this character-centric approach reduces formal achievements and enigmatic characters to inadequate approximations of one another.

Reference to character cannot fully tame unschematic and unpredictable combinations of -and collisions between - contradictory levels of narration, clashing styles, discontinuously edited shots, jarring allusions, dislocated genre signifiers, and intermedial elements.

Through close analyses of films by Roberto Rossellini, Robert Bresson, Luis Buñuel, Terence Davies, Peter Greenaway, and Kelly Reichardt, Complicating Articulation in Art Cinema offers an ethics of criticism that suggests that the politics of art cinema's eccentric form are limited by character-centredreadings.

Each of the featured films presents inarticulate characters, whose emotional and intellectual lives are unknowable, further complicating the relationship between character and form.

This book argues that, by acknowledging this resistance to interpretation, critics can think in new ways about art cinema'sinterrogation of the possibilities of knowledge.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£104.60
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192646397 / 9780192646392
eBook (EPUB)
791.43
02/12/2021
English
224 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%