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[ecrea] Utopian Television - Michael Cramer
Fri Jul 14 16:54:59 GMT 2017
*Utopian Television***
*Rossellini, Watkins, and Godard beyond Cinema***
/Michael Cramer///
"Both theoretical treatise and intellectual history, Michael Cramer’s
intervention matches the utopian vision of its subject as he efficiently
and astutely navigates us through the thorny politics of art
cinema."—Karl Schoonover, University of Warwick
"Michael Cramer's fine book explores those paths not taken that define a
genre, that interplay between film and TV pioneered by Rossellini in
service of a now utopian social pedagogy. Peter Watkins' understudied
work, along with Rossellini's experiments—unfamiliar to those who only
know him through the early masterpieces—throw a wholly new light on
Godard himself, and Cramer's luminous readings of the works are as
stimulating as his overall theorization of this new, or perhaps missed,
form."—Fredric Jameson, Duke University
Television has long been a symbol of social and cultural decay, yet many
in postwar Europe saw it as the medium with the greatest potential to
help build a new society and create a new form of audiovisual art.
/Utopian Television/ examines works of the great filmmakers Roberto
Rossellini, Peter Watkins, and Jean-Luc Godard, all of whom looked to
television as a promising new medium even while remaining critical of
its existing practices.
/Utopian Television/illustrates how each director imagined television’s
improved or “utopian” version by drawing on elements that had come to
characterize it by the early 1960s. Taking advantage of the public
service model of Western European broadcasting, each used television to
realize works that would never have been viable in the commercial
cinema. All three directors likewise seized on television’s supposed
affinity for information and its status as a “useful” medium, but
attempted to join this utility with aesthetic experimentation,
suggesting new ways to conceive of the relationship between aesthetics
and information.
As beautifully written as it is theoretically rigorous, /Utopian
Television/ turns to the writing of Fredric Jameson and Ernst Bloch in
treating the three directors’ television experiments as enactments of
“utopia as method.” In doing so it reveals the extent to which the
medium inspired and shaped hopes not only of a better future but of
better moving image art as well.
*Michael Cramer*is assistant professor of film history at Sarah Lawrence
College.
University of Minnesota Press | March 2017| 304pp | 9781517900397 | PB |
£24.99*
20% discount with this code: CSL17UTMC**
*Price subject to change.
**Offer excludes the USA, South America and Australia.
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