In this Book

summary
Ranging over the broad spectrum of contemporary literary and film theory, Breaking the Frame explores the different approaches to cinematic art that are offered by cognitive psychology, feminist theory, aesthetics, and psychoanalysis. In this study Inez Hedges looks closely at films that challenge accepted norms in both form and content. The films discussed here, including Zazie, La Nuit de Varennes, and E.T., break out of conventional frames, upsetting our expectations about how films should look (the film frame) as well as how experience is usually organized by cine- matic works of art (the psychological or cognitive frame). Hedges focuses on two primary areas: the way that the structure of film texts guides the interpretations of the spectator (hermeneutics) and the way that films reflect social models (representation). Within the hermeneutic approach, the author relates the unconventional use of film language in cinematic works of the 1960s and 1970s not only to the recent novels of Beckett and Queneau and to the French nouveau roman but also to one of the founding texts of Western literature, the Oedipus Rex of Sophocles. The discussion of representation exam- ines the social ascendancy of cinematic narrative in modern times in the light of the philosophical insights of Michel Foucault and Harold Bloom. Finally, contemporary feminist and psychoanalytic theories are brought to bear on cinematic representations of gender. Breaking the Frame will be of interest not only to scholars and students of film and literature but also to today's "filmliterate" public who enjoy exploring the theoretical and philosophical implications of cinematic works.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-Title Page

pp. i-ii

Title Page

pp. iii

Copyright

pp. iv

Dedication

pp. v-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Illustrations

pp. ix-x

Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xii

Introduction

pp. xiii-xvi

Part 1. Language

pp. 1-5

1. Breaking the Frame: Zazie and Film Language

pp. 6-17

2. Film Writing and the Poetics of Silence

pp. 18-32

Part 2. Representation

pp. 33-37

3. Forms of Representation in La Nuit de Varennes

pp. 38-51

4. Truffaut and Cocteau: Representations of Orpheus

pp. 52-66

Part 3. Subjectivity

pp. 67-71

5. Mediated Vision: Women’s Subjectivity

pp. 72-87

6. Women and Film Space

pp. 88-104

Part 4. Gender

pp. 105-108

7. Scripting Children’s Minds: E.T. and The Wizard of Oz

pp. 109-121

8. The Myth of the Perfect Woman: Cinema as Machine Célibataire

pp. 122-140

Conclusion

pp. 141-143

Notes

pp. 144-156

Index

pp. 157-160
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