Feeling Film
Affect and Authenticity in Popular Cinema
by Greg Singh
Average rating:
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
Your rating: -
Book Presentation:
Cinema has the capacity to enflame our passions, to arouse our pity, to inspire our love. Feeling Film is a book that examines the emotional encounters found in contemporary popular cinema cultures. Examining melodrama, film noir, comic book franchises, cult indie movies and romantic comedy within the context of a Jungian-informed psychology and contemporary movements in film-philosophy, this book considers the various kinds of feelings engendered by our everyday engagements with cinema.
Greg Singh questions the popular idea of what cinema is, and considers what happens during the anticipation and act of watching a movie, through to the act of sharing our feelings about them, the reviewing process and repeat-viewing practices. Feeling Film does this through a critique of purely textual approaches, instead offering a model which emphasises lived, warm (embodied and inhabited) psychological relationships between the viewer and the viewed. It extends the narrative action of cinema beyond the duration of the screening into realms of anticipation and afterlife, in particular providing insight into the tertiary and participatory practices afforded through rich media engagement. In rethinking the everyday, co-productive relationship between viewer and viewed from this perspective, Feeling Film reinstates the importance of feelings as a central concern for film theory.
What emerges from this study is a re-engagement of the place of emotion, affect and feeling in film theory and criticism. In reconsidering the duration of the cinematic encounter, Feeling Film makes a significant contribution to the understanding of the inter-subjective relationship between viewer and viewed. It takes post-Jungian criticism into the realms of post-cinema technologies and reignites the dialogue between depth psychology and the study of images as they appear to, and for, us. This book will make essential reading for those interested in the relationship between film and aspects of depth psychology, film and philosophy students at advanced undergraduate and postgraduate levels, film and cinema academics and cinephiles.
About the Author:
Greg Singh is Lecturer in Media and Communications at the University of Stirling. He is the author of Film After Jung: Post-Jungian approaches to film theory (Routledge, 2009).
See the publisher website: Routledge
> From the same author:
> 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
Film Audiences (2022)
Personal Journeys with Film
by Bridgette Wessels, Peter Merrington and Matthew Hanchard
Subject: Sociology
Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image (2021)
Something to Watch Over Me
Subject: Sociology
The Psychology of Moviegoing (2019)
Choosing, Viewing and Being Influenced by Films
by Ashton D. Trice and Hunter W. Greer
Subject: Sociology
Cinema as Therapy (2015)
Grief and transformational film
by John Izod and Joanna Dovalis
Subject: Sociology