Your country and preferred language.

Select your country Select language

Denna webbplats använder cookies för att säkerställa att du får den bästa upplevelsen.

Menu
Sökalternativ
Stäng

Välkommen till Sveriges största bokhandel

Här finns så gott som allt som givits ut på den svenska bokmarknaden under de senaste hundra åren.

  • Handla mot faktura och öppet köp i 21 dagar
  • Oavsett vikt och antal artiklar handlar du till enhetsfrakt från samma säljare i samma kundvagn
 Contemporary Italian Filmmaking  Strategies of Subversion: Pirandello, Fellini, Scola, and the Directors of the New Generation

Contemporary Italian Filmmaking Strategies of Subversion: Pirandello, Fellini, Scola, and the Directors of the New Generation

Häftad bok. University of Toronto Press. 1 uppl. 1995. 301 sidor.

Nyskick. Contemporary Italian Filmmaking is an innovative critique of Italian filmmaking in the aftermath of World War II - as it moves beyond traditional categories such as genre film and auteur cinema. Manuela Gieri demonstrates that Luigi Pirandello's revolutionary concept of humour was integral to the development of a counter-tradition in Italian filmmaking that she defines 'humoristic'. She delineates a 'Pirandellian genealogy' in Italian cinema, literature, and culture through her examination of the works of Federico Fellini, Ettore Scola, and many directors of the 'new generation,' such as Nanni Moretti, Gabriele Salvatores, Maurizio Nichetti, and Giuseppe Tornatore. A celebrated figure of the theatrical world, Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) is little known beyond Italy for his critical and theoretical writings on cinema and for his screenplays. Gieri brings to her reading of Pirandello's work the critical parameters offered by psychoanalysis, poststructuralism, and postmodernism to develop a syncretic and transcultural vision of the history of Italian cinema.She identifies two fundamental trends of development in this tradition: the 'melodramatic imagination' and the 'humoristic,' or comic, imagination. With her focus on the humoristic imagination, Gieri describes a 'Pirandellian mode' derived from his revolutionary utterances on the cinema and narrative, and specifically, from his essay on humour, L'umorismo (On Humour, 1908). She traces a history of the Pirandellian mode in cinema and investigates its characteristics, demonstrating the original nature of Italian filmmaking that is particularly indebted to Pirandello's interpretation of humour.

Inrikes enhetsfrakt Sverige: 62 SEK
Betala med Swish