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[ecrea] new book - Cinema's Bodily Illusions - Scott C. Richmond
Fri May 05 14:49:37 GMT 2017
A new publication from University of Minnesota Press
Free postage to UK customers
http://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/cinemas-bodily-illusions
**
*Cinema's Bodily Illusions***
*Flying, Floating, and Hallucinating***
/Scott C. Richmond///
"In laying out his theory of proprioceptive aesthetics in cinema,
/Cinema’s Bodily Illusions/ makes a boldly provocative contribution to
the study of bodies, film screens, and media technology. Rescuing
cinematic illusion from the perjorative sense with which modernist film
scholarship disparages it, Scott C. Richmond finds a visceral (rather
than cerebral) thematization of the resonance between ordinary
perception and cinematic perception."—Jennifer M. Barker, author of /The
Tactile Eye: Touch and the Cinematic Experience/
"Richmond’s theory and method offers an important tool for doing some of
the critical work that spectator theory cannot. /Cinema’s Bodily
Illusions/ may become an influential vein within postmodern
phenomenology. It offers a critical method for understanding the
aesthetic moment outside of representational blinders."—/PopMatters/
Do contemporary big-budget blockbuster films like /Gravity/ move
something in us that is fundamentally the same as what avant-garde and
experimental films have done for more than a century? In a powerful
challenge to mainstream film theory, /Cinema’s Bodily Illusions/
demonstrates that this is the case.
Scott C. Richmond bridges genres and periods by focusing, most palpably,
on cinema’s power to evoke illusions: feeling like you’re flying through
space, experiencing 3D without glasses, or even hallucinating. He argues
that cinema is, first and foremost, a technology to modulate perception.
He presents a theory of cinema as a proprioceptive technology: cinema
becomes art by modulating viewers’ embodied sense of space. It works
primarily not at the level of the intellect but at the level of the
body. Richmond develops his theory through examples of direct perceptual
illusion in cinema: hallucinatory flicker phenomena in Tony Conrad’s
/The Flicker/, eerie depth effects in Marcel Duchamp’s /Anémic Cinéma/,
the illusion of bodily movement through onscreen space in Stanley
Kubrick’s /2001/, Godfrey Reggio’s /Koyaanisqatsi/, and Alfonso Cuarón’s
/Gravity/. In doing so he combines insights from Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s
phenomenology of perception and James J. Gibson’s ecological approach to
perception. The result is his distinctive ecological phenomenology,
which allows us to refocus on the cinema’s perceptual, rather than
representational, power.
Arguing against modernist habits of mind in film theory and aesthetics,
and the attendant proclamations of cinema’s death or irrelevance,
Richmond demonstrates that cinema’s proprioceptive aesthetics make it an
urgent site of contemporary inquiry.
*Scott C. Richmond*is assistant professor of cinema and digital media in
the Cinema Studies Institute at the University of Toronto.
University of Minnesota Press | October 2016| 264pp | 9780816690992 | PB
| £22.99*
20% discount with this code: CSL2017CBI**
*Price subject to change.
**Offer excludes the USA, South America and Australia.
Author and independent bookshop blog - Bookscombined.com
<https://bookscombined.com/>
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