Les livres en français sont sur www.livres-cinema.info
MENU   

Cinema and Experience

Siegfried Kracauer, Walter Benjamin, and Theodor W. Adorno

Sous la direction de Miriam Bratu Hansen

Type
Essays
Sujet
Theory
Mots Clés
Siegfried Kracauer, theory, philosophy
Année d'édition
2011
Editeur
University of California Press
Collection
Weimar & Now: German Cultural Criticism
Langue
anglais
Taille d'un livre de poche 11x18cmTaille relative de ce livreTaille d'un grand livre (29x22cm)
Taille du livre
Format
Paperback • 408 pages
6 x 9 inches (15 x 23 cm)
ISBN
978-0-520-26560-8
Appréciation
pas d'appréciation (0 vote)

Moyenne des votes : pas d'appréciation

0 vote 1 étoile = On peut s'en passer
0 vote 2 étoiles = Bon livre
0 vote 3 étoiles = Excellent livre
0 vote 4 étoiles = Unique / une référence

Votre vote : -

Signaler des informations incorrectes ou incomplètes

Description de l'ouvrage:
Siegfried Kracauer, Walter Benjamin, and Theodor W. Adorno—affiliated through friendship, professional ties, and argument—developed an astute philosophical critique of modernity in which technological media played a key role. This book explores in depth their reflections on cinema and photography from the Weimar period up to the 1960s. Miriam Bratu Hansen brings to life an impressive archive of known and, in the case of Kracauer, less known materials and reveals surprising perspectives on canonic texts, including Benjamin’s artwork essay. Her lucid analysis extrapolates from these writings the contours of a theory of cinema and experience that speaks to questions being posed anew as moving image culture evolves in response to digital technology.

À propos de l'auteur :
The late Miriam Bratu Hansen was Ferdinand Schevill Distinguished Service Professor in the Humanities at the University of Chicago and the founding chair of what is now the Department of Cinema and Media Studies. Her publications include Babel and Babylon: Spectatorship in American Silent Film and numerous essays in international film history and film theory.

Revue de Presse:
"This magisterial book is a gift--and a must--for anyone interested in critical theory’s engagement with film, media, and mass culture; there is no other study like it."— Artforum[Hansen’s] reader is amply rewarded by the rich suggestiveness and expansive quality of her insights. . . . A crowning achievement."— Bookforum

"Cinema and Experience aptly fuses historiography and theory."— Cineaste

"This superb, deeply felt work is obviously the result of an enormous amount of thinking, sifting, and research. . . . Smoothly blending biography and analysis, this fresh, comprehensive, surprisingly page-turning treatment of Kracauer, Benjamin, and Adorno is perhaps the best, and most lucid account to date of their work."— Choice

"Those students who’ve had the pleasure of becoming acquainted with Hansen’s work, as well as those who have not, stand to benefit considerably from the publication of this final work, a crowning achievement in its own right."— Bookforum

"Cinema and Experience aptly fuses historiography and theory."— Cineaste

"Like a careful gardener, Miriam Hansen planted and interwove traditions of Frankfurt critical theory, modern film history, and her own critical passions and curiosity. She is an important transatlantic bridge for the traditions of enlightenment and film art. She was not only a theoretical mind, but someone who also exerted a strong, practical influence on filmmaking. Because of her, the Minutenfilm saw a rebirth, as well as film projected onto multiple screens, the Max Ophüls renaissance, and much more. We auteurs listened to her. She was—as she sat in her Chicago office and worked, occasionally glancing over the lake—our prophet."

—Alexander Kluge, Berlin Journal

"Cinema and Experience is a doubly poignant book: simultaneously a soulful investigation into the complex fate of experience in a mass-mediated modernity and the posthumous publication of the culminating masterwork of one the master scholars of cinema studies. Rich and probing insights resonate from every page of this wonderful volume."

—Dana Polan, author of Scenes of Instruction: The Beginnings of the U.S. Study of Film

"Miriam Hansen’s brilliant analysis of the cinematic experience combines a democratic respect for mass culture with the highest standards of scholarly excellence. Mickey Mouse, slapstick comedy, the photographic image and filmed reality become her keys to deciphering the philosophical differences between Adorno and Benjamin, and the philosophical significance of Kracauer’s journalistic eye. The present—new media, social networking, drone warfare—is never out of her sight. For the beginning student and the advanced scholar in multiple disciplines, Hansen’s writing is a gift, and a roadmap to every relevant scholarly debate. This is an indispensable book by an irreplaceable author. We shall miss her."

—Susan Buck-Morss, author of The Dialectics of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project

"Miriam Hansen’s study is the first comprehensive reconstruction of the complex theoretical frames in which Adorno, Benjamin, and Kracauer set their philosophical thoughts on film and cinema. Hansen’s profound knowledge of the complete works of these influential thinkers allows her to relate questions of film and cinema aesthetics to the core thoughts of the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School in manifold and sometimes surprisingly new ways. This study will establish a new look at the Frankfurt School as well as on film theory in general."

—Gertrud Koch, author of Siegfried Kracauer: An Introduction

"In her posthumous book, Miriam Hansen offers novel readings, both subtle and robust, of Kracauer, Benjamin, and Adorno’s reflections on cinema as experience, weaving often disconnected threads into a tapestry of common concepts and concerns that highlights closeness and distance between these writers in unexpected ways. What emerges is yet another Frankfurt School: Critical Theory as media aesthetics and theory of experience.

The triangulation of Adorno and Benjamin with Kracauer permits her to think beyond the annoyingly persistent accounts pitting the Eurocentric mandarin against the progressive film and media theorist. The inspirational role of Kracauer for Benjamin is finally acknowledged and Kracauer is freed from the misunderstanding of his work on photography and film as a naïve realism. And who but Miriam Hansen would have been able to link Benjamin’s notion of aura—explicated in a much broadened discursive and political context—to Adorno’s aesthetic of natural beauty? Thinking with Adorno beyond Adorno in modernist aesthetics, with Benjamin beyond Benjamin in media theory, with Kracauer beyond Kracauer on mass culture, she keeps the legacy of Critical Theory alive for an analysis of human experience and cultural practice in our age of digital media."

—Andreas Huyssen, Columbia University

Voir le site internet de l'éditeur University of California Press

> Sur un thème proche :

Siegfried Kracauer:An Introduction

Siegfried Kracauer (2000)

An Introduction

de Gertrud Koch

Sujet : Film Analysis

Cinematic Realism:Lukács, Kracauer and Theories of the Filmic Real

Cinematic Realism (2020)

Lukács, Kracauer and Theories of the Filmic Real

de Ian Aitken

Sujet : Theory

The Major Realist Film Theorists:A Critical Anthology

The Major Realist Film Theorists (2016)

A Critical Anthology

Dir. Ian Aitken

Sujet : Theory

Theory of Film:The Redemption of Physical Reality

Theory of Film (1997)

The Redemption of Physical Reality

de Siegfried Kracauer

Sujet : Theory

The Major Film Theories:An Introduction

The Major Film Theories (1976)

An Introduction

de J. Dudley Andrew

Sujet : Theory

The Politics of Imagination:Benjamin, Kracauer, Kluge

The Politics of Imagination (2007)

Benjamin, Kracauer, Kluge

de Tara Forrest

Sujet : Theory

Cinema of/for the Anthropocene:Affect, Ecology, and More-Than-Human Kinship

Cinema of/for the Anthropocene (2025)

Affect, Ecology, and More-Than-Human Kinship

Dir. Katarzyna Paszkiewicz et Andrea Ruthven

Sujet : Theory

Haunting the World:Essays on Film After Perkins and Cavell

Haunting the World (2025)

Essays on Film After Perkins and Cavell

de Dominic Lash

Sujet : Theory

Film, Negation and Freedom:Capitalism and Romantic Critique

Film, Negation and Freedom (2025)

Capitalism and Romantic Critique

de Will Kitchen

Sujet : Theory

11749 livres recensés   •   (c)2024-2025 cinemabooks.info   •