Cinema And Modernity
分類: 图书,进口原版,Arts & Photography(艺术与摄影),
品牌: John Orr
基本信息出版社:Polity; 1 (1993年12月15日)平装:240页正文语种:英语ISBN:0745611869条形码:9780745611860商品尺寸:22.7 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm商品重量:399 gASIN:0745611869商品描述内容简介This book discusses the complex relation between modernity and cinema drawing particularly upon the European and American cinema during the second half of the twentieth century. Orr attempts to rethink the relation of film-making to the contemporary world challenging many of the critical complacencies of post-modernism and offering a fresh perspective upon the development of the modern cinema.媒体推荐'This book offers a refreshing re-appraisal of some of the more interesting trends in western cinema from the late 1950s to the mid 1970s.Cinema and Modernityis a thoughtful and stimulating contribution to film scholarship which successfully combines critical insight with an acute awareness of the cultural and political forces which shaped western industrial society in the post-war world.'Duncan Petrie, British Film Institute
<!--end-->'The most refreshing aspect about this very readable book is its perspective. The author discusses a wide range of European and American films, including a number of contemporary titles, in the light of the major cultural and political forces which have shaped Western industrial society this century. Provocative, challenging. Recommended.'Media Information Australia
'... The discussion ranges widely.... There is a great deal of interesting material here. The book has many rewards and insights. ... The discussions of particular films... are the best things about this book. Often what is said is suggestive, inviting a re-reading or re-assessment of the works.'
British Journal of Aesthetics
'... Engaging and intelligent analysis of post-war cinema... I have no compunction in recommending this work to students and scholars alike as a central text for any discussion of modernity and film.'Sociology
'... A fine polemical introduction to the nature of cinemagraphic experience as a mirror of culture.'The Reader's Review