Cinema and Sacrifice
Edited by Costica Bradatan and Camil Ungureanu
Average rating:
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
Your rating: -
Book Presentation:
Cinema has a long history of engaging with the theme of sacrifice. Given its capacity to stimulate the imagination and resonate across a wide spectrum of human experiences, sacrifice has always attracted filmmakers. It is on screen that the new grand narratives are sketched, the new myths rehearsed, and the old ones recycled. Sacrifice can provide stories of loss and mourning, betrayal and redemption, death and renewal, destruction and re-creation, apocalypses and the birth of new worlds.
The contributors to this volume are not just scholars of film but also students of religion and literature, philosophers, ethicists, and political scientists, thus offering a comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach to the relationship between cinema and sacrifice. They explore how cinema engages with sacrifice in its many forms and under different guises, and examine how the filmic constructions, reconstructions and misconstructions of sacrifice affect society, including its sacrificial practices.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities.
About the authors:
Costica Bradatan is Professor of Humanities at Texas Tech University, USA, and Honorary Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of Queensland, Australia. He has authored or edited several books, including Dying for Ideas: The Dangerous Lives of the Philosophers (2015) and Philosophy as a Literary Art: Making Things Up (2014).
Camil Ungureanu is Lecturer in Political Theory at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain. He is co-editor of Law, State and Religion in the New Europe (2012) and Jϋrgen Habermas' Theory of Law and Democracy (2011). His work has been published in a number of journals including the Journal of Political Philosophy and the European Journal of Political Theory.
See the publisher website: Routledge
> From the same authors:
István Szabó (2024)
Filmmaker of Existential Choices
by Susan Rubin Suleiman and Costica Bradatan
Subject: Director > István Szabó
Religion in Contemporary European Cinema (2017)
The Postsecular Constellation
Dir. Costica Bradatan and Camil Ungureanu
> On a related topic:
Experiencing Epiphanies in Literature and Cinema (2024)
Arts and Humanities for Sustainable Well-being
Subject: Sociology
Film/Video-Based Therapy and Trauma (2022)
Research and Practice
Dir. Joshua L. Cohen
Subject: Sociology
Traumatic Loss and Recovery in Jungian Studies and Cinema (2022)
Transdisciplinary Approaches in Grief Theory
Subject: Sociology