Ulteriori informazioni
Black Screens, White Frames offers a new understanding of cinematic blankness. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's philosophy and pursuing an affirmative approach to non-images through the concept of the filmmaking machine, Tanya Shilina-Conte shows how absence as a productive mode alters the ways in which we study film.
Sommario
- Acknowledgments
- Fade-In: Introduction. The Filmmaking Machine, or Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Black or White Screen
- Chapter 1. Divergent Darkness: The Black Screen in Early Cinema
- Chapter 2. Convergent Codes: Fade-ins and Fade-outs as Rational Transitions in Classical Cinema
- Chapter 3. The Black or White Screen as a Tool of Deterritorialization in Modern and Experimental Cinema
- Chapter 4. One Chapter Less: The Black or White Screen in Minor Cinema
- Chapter 5. Folds to Black or White in Minor Cinema and Art Practice
- Chapter 6. Alternate Endings: The Black or White Screen in Post-Cinema
- Fade-Out: Conclusion. This Video Does Not Exist: The Remix of Black or White Screens and Multimodal Scholarship
- Notes
- Index
Info autore
Tanya Shilina-Conte is Assistant Professor of Global Film Studies in the Department of English, University at Buffalo. Her essays have appeared in Screen, Film-Philosophy, Frames Cinema Journal, Word & Image, Studia Phænomenologica, In Media Res, Iran Namag, Leitura: Teoria & Prática, Studia Linguistica, Border Visions: Identity and Diaspora in Film, and elsewhere.
Riassunto
Black Screens, White Frames offers a new understanding of cinematic blankness. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's philosophy and pursuing an affirmative approach to non-images through the concept of the filmmaking machine, Tanya Shilina-Conte shows how absence as a productive mode alters the ways in which we study film.
Testo aggiuntivo
Black Screens, White Frames brilliantly expands on the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari to show how the use of black screens and white frames can vacillate between an expression of conservative narratology and radical deterritorializations, from early cinema to post-war experimental and non-western minoritarian cinema. This book is not only an exemplary work of film-philosophy but also the perfect reader's guide to the practical application of Deleuze and Guattari's philosophy as a whole. Perhaps the greatest accolade that one could give Professor Shilina-Conte is that she is not only an accomplished scholarly and film auteur but also the ultimate catalyst for our own creative involvement in the films themselves.