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Zusatztext Warwick Mules engages in a serious and ambitious attempt to ask what is really going on when we watch a movie, via the work of several philosophers but above all Bernard Stiegler. The highly original “figural” approach pursued by Mules sees films as ways in which we feel our way towards the future, where doing so, in the incompletion if not the failure to cohere of the individual, the collective and the film itself, comes to be seen as the very thing that opens pathways towards telling a future otherwise. The spiralling backwards and forwards movements and leaps of time described by Mules are exemplified in brilliant readings of a diverse range of movies – from Rear Window , The Third Man and L’Eclisse to Beckett’s Film , but especially the more recent The Father (by Florian Zeller) – leaving the reader with the feeling that, just perhaps, cinema has not yet exhausted its potential to reorient the disorientation that characterizes our contemporary inexistence. Informationen zum Autor Warwick Mules is Adjunct Associate Professor at Southern Cross University, Australia. He is the author of With Nature: Nature Philosophy as Poetics through Schelling, Heidegger, Benjamin and Nancy (2014) and publishes in the philosophies of film and visual technology, informed by eco-critique. Klappentext Film Figures develops a figural account of the memory structure of films. Employing theoretical concepts drawn from a range of sources, including French post-humanist philosophy and German Idealism, the book undertakes an organology of film guided by the work of Bernard Stiegler whose philosophy of mnemotechnesis provides the framework of analysis. Situating films in the quantum field of spacetime relativity as a field of cosmic views, inquiry into film figures begins with disturbances in the experience of films themselves, posing questions of the relation between the dead past and the living future in film story-telling. By breaking the façade of the continuing present through self-questioning, we open films to their figural dimensions in the counter-movement of drive as negentropic resistance. Following the back-movement of drive switches our perception to the figural register in which characters become figures probing blindly for what the film will have been in another time - a time yet to be lived. By following the anterior possibilities of this other time, we open films to the archival future in which a new future comes forth. This book provides theoretical and analytical concepts as well as strategies for taking a step into this future, guided by questions of the right path to take given the relativity of views in which the film can be experienced. Films analysed include Murnau's The Last Laugh , Capra's It's a Wonderful Life , Hitchcock's Rear Window , Welles's The Lady from Shanghai , Fellini's Intervista , Antonioni's L'Eclisse , Bresson's Une Femme Douce , and Zeller's The Father . Vorwort Develops a program for undertaking figural analysis of narrative film by drawing on the work of Bernard Stiegler and other philosophers and film analysts in terms of mnemotechnics. Zusammenfassung Film Figures develops a figural account of the memory structure of films. Employing theoretical concepts drawn from a range of sources, including French post-humanist philosophy and German Idealism, the book undertakes an organology of film guided by the work of Bernard Stiegler whose philosophy of mnemotechnesis provides the framework of analysis. Situating films in the quantum field of spacetime relativity as a field of cosmic views, inquiry into film figures begins with disturbances in the experience of films themselves, posing questions of the relation between the dead past and the living future in film story-telling. By breaking the façade of the continuing pr...