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Life 24x a Second highlights the life-sustaining and life-affirming power of cinema. Author Elsie Walker pays particular attention to pedagogical practice and students' reflections on what the study of cinema has given to their lives. This book provides multiple perspectives on why cinema matters to individuals and in the world at large, focusing on films that represent psychological breakthroughs, progressive possibilities for social change, and cross-cultural human connections.
List of contents
- 1. Introduction: Cinema is Life
- 2. Black Lives Matter, "Talking Back," and the Life of BlacKkKlansman
- 3. Levels of Listening to Nobody Knows: Uniting Personal Experience, Pedagogical Practice, and Social Purpose
- 4. HeartMath: Listening to the "organ of fire" and Dancer in the Dark
- 5. Hearing Life in the Midst of Death: Psychological Healing within Life of Pi, Ikiru, and A Star Is Born
- 6. Turning the Microphone Around: Hearing from Alumni
- 7. Life After Life: rehearing Call Me By Your Name and Portrait of a Lady on Fire
- Index
- Bibliography
About the author
Elsie Walker is Professor of Cinema Studies at Salisbury University. She is the author of
Hearing Haneke: The Soundtracks of a Radical Auteur and
Understanding Sound Tracks Through Film Theory, and editor of
Literature/Film Quarterly, the longest-standing international journal about adaptation studies.
Summary
Life 24x a Second highlights the life-sustaining and life-affirming power of cinema. Author Elsie Walker pays particular attention to pedagogical practice and students' reflections on what the study of cinema has given to their lives. This book provides multiple perspectives on cinema that matters for the deepest personal and social reasons-from films that represent psychological healing in the face of individual losses to films that represent humanitarian hope in the face of global crises. Ultimately, Walker shows how cinema that moves us emotionally can move us toward a better world.
Life 24x a Second makes the case for cinema as a life force in uplifting and widely relatable ways. Walker zeroes in on films that offer hope in relation to the Black Lives Matter movement (Imitation of Life, 1959, and BlacKkKlansman, 2018); contemporary feminism (Nobody Knows, 2004); rite-of-passage experiences of mortality and mourning (Ikiru, 1952, and A Star Is Born, 2018), and first-love grief (Call Me by Your Name, 2017, and Portrait of a Lady on Fire, 2019). Life 24x a Second invites readers to reflect on their own unique film-to-person encounters along with connecting them to others who love cinematic lessons for living well.
Additional text
the book provides an unusually intimate engagement with its author, but this courageous intimacy is part of the project. Walker finds life, connection, and compassion in cinema--qualities also found in this wonderful book.