Asia Pacific University Library catalogue


Ethics of cinematic experience : screens of alterity [electronic resources] / Orna Raviv.

By: Raviv, OrnaMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Routledge advances in film studiesPublication details: New York, NY : Routledge, 2020Description: 1 online resource (163 pages)ISBN: 9780429765353 (electronic book); 9780429765346; 0429765347; 9780429427893; 0429427891; 9780429765360; 0429765355; 0429765363Subject(s): Motion picture audiences -- Psychology | Motion pictures -- Philosophy | Other (Philosophy) in motion pictures | Motion pictures -- Moral and ethical aspects | Motion picture audiences -- Psychology | Motion pictures -- Moral and ethical aspects | Motion pictures -- Philosophy | Other (Philosophy) in motion pictures | PERFORMING ARTS / Film & Video / History & Criticism | PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media StudiesGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 791.4301 LOC classification: PN1995.9.A8 | R38 2020ebOnline resources: Available in EBSCOhost Log in to view full text.
Contents:
Perspectivalism and beyond -- Point of view -- The cinematic type -- The face and the close-up -- The face and the close-up take 2 -- Becoming machine -- Cinema's responsibilities.
Summary: "Ethics of Cinematic Experience: Screens of Alterity deals with the relationship between cinema and ethics from a philosophical perspective, finding an intrinsic connection between film spectatorship and the possibility of being open to different modes of alterity. The book's main thesis is that openness to otherness is already found in the basic structures of cinematic experience. Through a close examination of the ethical relevance of the philosophy of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Stanley Cavell, Emmanuel Levinas and Gilles Deleuze to cinema studies, Ethics of Cinematic Experience: Screens of Alterity pursues the question of how film can open the viewer to what is not her, and so bring her to encounter otherness in a way that is unique to cinematic experience. The book sees ethics as not just the subject, content or story of a film but part of its aesthetic structure. Accompanied by readings of films mainly from mainstream cinema, each chapter focuses on a different aspect of the encounter with alterity through cinema. The book gives particular attention to how theoretical discussion of the cinematic close-up can lead to ethical insights into the status of both the human and the non-human in film, and thus lead to an understanding of the relationships the viewer makes with them. The book is a helpful resource for students and scholars interested in the relationship between philosophy, film and ethics, and is appropriate for students of philosophy and media and cultural studies"--
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E-Book PN1995.9.A8 R38 2020eb (Browse shelf (Opens below)) 1 Available

Includes bibliographical references, filmographies, and index.

Perspectivalism and beyond -- Point of view -- The cinematic type -- The face and the close-up -- The face and the close-up take 2 -- Becoming machine -- Cinema's responsibilities.

"Ethics of Cinematic Experience: Screens of Alterity deals with the relationship between cinema and ethics from a philosophical perspective, finding an intrinsic connection between film spectatorship and the possibility of being open to different modes of alterity. The book's main thesis is that openness to otherness is already found in the basic structures of cinematic experience. Through a close examination of the ethical relevance of the philosophy of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Stanley Cavell, Emmanuel Levinas and Gilles Deleuze to cinema studies, Ethics of Cinematic Experience: Screens of Alterity pursues the question of how film can open the viewer to what is not her, and so bring her to encounter otherness in a way that is unique to cinematic experience. The book sees ethics as not just the subject, content or story of a film but part of its aesthetic structure. Accompanied by readings of films mainly from mainstream cinema, each chapter focuses on a different aspect of the encounter with alterity through cinema. The book gives particular attention to how theoretical discussion of the cinematic close-up can lead to ethical insights into the status of both the human and the non-human in film, and thus lead to an understanding of the relationships the viewer makes with them. The book is a helpful resource for students and scholars interested in the relationship between philosophy, film and ethics, and is appropriate for students of philosophy and media and cultural studies"--

Orna Raviv is a filmmaker and a film theorist. She is an assistant teaching professor at the Unit for History and Philosophy of Art, Design and Technology, Shenkar College, and a teaching fellow at the Philosophy Department of Haifa University.

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