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[ecrea] DAVID MARTIN-JONES - Deleuze, Cinema and National Identity
Wed Feb 27 16:30:00 GMT 2008
>Deleuze Cinema and National Identity
>
>Narrative Time in National Contexts
>
>David Martin Jones
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>An impressive feat and a model for future
>scholarship in this vein. Martin-Jones makes
>Deleuze matter, in that his historical
>perspective stresses that the Deleuzian
>distinction between time- and movement-images is
>not merely formal, but deeply political.
>Screen<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns =
>"urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />
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>[This book] tackles the burning questions of
>globalisation. While critiquing the dated,
>European, even French nature of Deleuzian
>philosophy, <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns =
>"urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags"
>/>David Martin-Jones brings out its contemporary
>relevance in a global context & The strength of
>the analyses, and the work as a whole lies in
>its avoidance of triumphalism, whether national
>or transnational. Applied to such highly
>political questions, the notions of
>deterritorialisation and reterritorialisation
>emerge in all their complexity and power. Questions de communication
>
>
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>Martin-Jones gives us not another book on how
>to define a national cinema; rather, he writes
>something far more useful, by exploring the
>construction of national identity through
>popular narrative cinemas. Senses of Cinema
>
>
>
>Deleuze, Cinema and National Identity deploys
>Deleuzes philosophical ideas to examine the
>construction of national identity across a range
>of different cinemas. Focusing on unusual
>constructions of narrative time, the films
>discussed include: Eternal Sunshine of the
>Spotless Mind, Terminator 3, Memento, Saving
>Private Ryan, Run Lola Run, Sliding Doors, Chaos
>and Peppermint Candy. Each film is examined in
>light of a major historical event such as
>9/11, German reunification and the Asian
>economic crisis and the impact it had on
>individual nations. This cross-cultural approach
>illustrates how Deleuzes work enhances our
>understanding of the construction of national
>identity in cinema, and enables a critique of
>Deleuzes at times Eurocentric conclusions.
>
>
>
>Key Features
>
>· The first sustained analysis of Deleuze,
>cinema and national identity, bringing together film theory and film history
>
>· Examines how narrative time is used to
>construct national identity across a range of
>different cinemas, including Britain, Germany,
>North America, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Italy and Poland
>
>· Uses Deleuze in conjunction with
>different types of recent cinema, from Hollywood
>blockbusters to European art films, to Asian gangster movies
>
>
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>David Martin-Jones lectures in Film Studies at
>the University of St Andrews. He has published
>work in a range of international journals,
>including Cinema Journal and Screen. He is on
>the editorial boards of A/V: The Journal of
>Deleuzian Studies and Film-Philosophy. His
>research focuses on questions of national
>identity and popular cinemas, primarily using
>Deleuze, but also by examining representations
>of Scotland and various Asian Cinemas.
>
>
>
>February 2008
>
>256pp
>
>ISBN 978 0 7486 3585 6
>
>£18.99
>
>
>
><http://www.eup.ed.ac.uk>www.eup.ed.ac.uk
>
>____________
>
>Anna Glazier
>Marketing Manager
>Edinburgh University Press
>
>22 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LF
>tel 0131 650 4223
>www.eup.ed.ac.uk
>
>Edinburgh University Press Journals Online has
>now launched. Visit www.eupjournals.com to view
>full-text of articles for FREE until the end of March 2008.
>
>Edinburgh University Press Ltd
>Registered Office - 22 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LF
>Registered at Companies House Edinburgh on 9th day of July 1992
>Company Registration No. SC139240. Charities No. SC035813.
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