
- 312 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism
About this book
World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism is a highly original study. Traditional views of cinematic realism usually draw on the so-called classical cinema and its allegiance to narrative mimesis, but Nagib challenges this, drawing instead on the filmmaker's commitment to truth and to the film medium's material bond with the real.
Starting from the premise that world cinema's creative peaks are governed by an ethics of realism, Nagib conducts comparative case studies picked from world new waves, such as the Japanese New Wave, the French nouvelle vague, the Cinema Novo, the New German Cinema, the Russo-Cuban Revolutionary Cinema, the Portuguese self-performing auteur and the Inuit Indigenous Cinema. Drawing upon Badiou and Rancière, World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism revisits and reformulates several fundamental concepts in film studies, such as illusionism, identification, apparatus, alienation effects, presentation and representation. Its groundbreaking scholarship takes film theory in a bold new direction.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- INTRODUCTION
- Part I: Physical Cinema
- Part II: The Reality of the Medium
- Part III: The Ethics of Desire
- Part IV: The Production of Reality
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index