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Cinematic Mythmaking: Philosophy in Film (Irving Singer Library)

Cinematic Mythmaking: Philosophy in Film (Irving Singer Library)

Current price: $9.99
Publication Date: September 24th, 2010
Publisher:
MIT Press
ISBN:
9780262515153
Pages:
245
Special Order - Subject to Availability

Description

Mythic themes and philosophical probing in film as an art form, as seen in works of Preston Sturges, Jean Cocteau, Stanley Kubrick, and various other filmmakers.

Film is the supreme medium for mythmaking. The gods and heroes of mythology are both larger than life and deeply human; they teach us about the world, and they tell us a good story. Similarly, our experience of film is both distant and intimate. Cinematic techniques--panning, tracking, zooming, and the other tools in the filmmaker's toolbox--create a world that is unlike reality and yet realistic at the same time. We are passive spectators, but we also have a personal relationship with the images we are seeing. In Cinematic Mythmaking, Irving Singer explores the hidden and overt use of myth in various films and, in general, the philosophical elements of a film's meaning. Mythological themes, Singer writes, perform a crucial role in cinematic art and even philosophy itself. Singer incisively disentangles the strands of different myths in the films he discusses. He finds in Preston Sturges's The Lady Eve that Barbara Stanwyck's character is not just the biblical Eve but a liberated woman of our times; Eliza Doolittle in the filmed versions of Shaw's Pygmalion is not just a statue brought to life but instead a heroic woman who must survive her own dark night of the soul. The protagonist of William Wyler's The Heiress and Anieszka Holland's Washington Square is both suffering Dido and an awakened Amazon. Singer reads Cocteau's films--including La Belle et la B te, Orph e, and The Testament of Orpheus--as uniquely mythological cinematic poetry. He compares Kubrickean and Homeric epics and analyzes in depth the self-referential mythmaking of Federico Fellini in many of his movies, including 81/2. The aesthetic and probing inventiveness in film, Singer shows us, restores and revives for audiences in the twenty-first century myths of creation, of the questing hero, and of ideals--both secular and religious--that have had enormous significance throughout the human search for love and meaning in life.

About the Author

Raif Karam is a theatre director who has devoted his creative life to bringing experimentalperformance to Lebanon. He has studied abroad and, in 2001, he was a VisitingScholar at the Department of Performance Studies, Tisch School of the Arts/NYU. Hewill stage Taziyeh -- a traditional Iranian performance depicting the martyrdom ofHussein, the Prophet Mohammed's nephew -- in Beirut in February 2004.