Shimmering images
trans cinema, embodiment, and the aesthetics of change
Moyenne des votes :
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
Votre vote : -
Description de l'ouvrage:
In Shimmering Images Eliza Steinbock traces how cinema offers alternative ways to understand gender transitions through a specific aesthetics of change. Drawing on Barthes's idea of the “shimmer” and Foucault's notion of sex as a mirage, the author shows how sex and gender can appear mirage-like on film, an effect they label shimmering. Steinbock applies the concept of shimmering—which delineates change in its emergent form as well as the qualities of transforming bodies, images, and affects—to analyses of films that span time and genre. These include examinations of the fantastic and phantasmagorical shimmerings of sex change in Georges Méliès's nineteenth-century trick films and Lili Elbe's 1931 autobiographical writings and photomontage in Man into Woman. Steinbock also explores more recent documentaries, science fiction, and pornographic and experimental films. Presenting a cinematic philosophy of transgender embodiment that demonstrates how shimmering images mediate transitioning, Steinbock not only offers a corrective to the gender binary orientation of feminist film theory; they open up new means to understand trans ontologies and epistemologies as emergent, affective, and processual.
À propos de l'auteur :
Eliza Steinbock is Associate Professor of Gender and Diversity Studies in the Department of Literature and Art, Maastricht University.
Revue de Presse:
"Through the concept of shimmering, Eliza Steinbock promotes a trans cinematic aesthetic that provides the means to move beyond examining issues of representation. Innovative and sophisticated, Shimmering Images offers a delightful, whirlwind experience and a stimulating encounter with cinema, media, and trans studies as well as aesthetics and affect theory." - Chris Straayer, author of Deviant Eyes, Deviant Bodies: Sexual Re-orientation in Film and Video
"Deftly combining film theory, affect theory, trans studies, and aesthetics, Eliza Steinbock's scintillating new book makes a bravura contribution to each of the fields it draws from. They argue that, in delinking and relinking sounds and images across literal cuts, filmmaking necessarily enacts a ‘transsexual logic of cinematic embodiment.’ The brilliance of the book lies in the sophistication with which it develops that fundamental insight into a full-fledged practice of reading, watching, feeling, thinking, and interpreting. It's a game-changer." - Susan Stryker, coeditor of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly
"The greatest achievement of Shimmering Images is Steinbock’s contestation of the status of the 'visible,' and of the attendant concepts expressed in the hegemonic Enlightenment insistence that to see something is to know it: 'visuality,' 'recognition,' 'knowledge,' and 'objectivity.'. . . . Steinbock leaves the reader with new tools for examining trans embodiment with(in) cinema." - Elizabeth Berman, Feral Feminisms
"Shimmering Images is often exquisitely poetic, evoking Roland Barthes's work as it describes the author's passionate investigation of media, mediation, and embodiment.… Steinbock's concept of shimmering images expresses how we thrill to certain mediated moments not in spite of, but because of, who we are and who we are becoming—in dialogue with the media that we encounter, that we seek out, and that shimmers in our lives." - Nicole Morse, Critical Inquiry
"Whether you are a cinephile, transgender studies scholar, or simply curious, Shimmering Images comes highly recommended to readers from a wide array of backgrounds." - Eva Theunissen, Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies
"Shimmering Images contains a rich and topical cultural analysis extending across time and across genres that is underpinned by a commitment to interdisciplinary research that will undoubtedly be of value for scholars and students in film studies, transgender studies, feminist theory, cultural studies, and queer theory."
- Lieke Hettinga, Screen Bodies
"There's much to admire about this book." - Dominic Johnson, Art Journal
"Offering insight into how systemic cruelty is mediated by culturally determined epistemes, Shimmering Images provides a practical framework for how we can interface with these systems, as trans people and trans-lovers, in potentially resistant or subversive ways." - Isaac Preiss, TSQ
"Shimmering Images is an exciting and erudite consideration of not only transsexuality on film, but also an elaboration of how cinema links and delinks bodies and sexuality, while also being full of bodies that morph even as cinema animates bodies." - William Brown, Film-Philosophy
"Tracing a history of trans cinema, Steinbock pays special attention to the cutting, suturing, editing, and projecting of desire. The concept of the shimmer is elusive and evasive, just as trans-inter-queer ontologies are notoriously difficult to pin down and define in any concrete, definite way. Steinbock provides a method of understanding these ontologies which embrace this promiscuity, and which allows for meaningful analyses and understandings in trans and queer studies." - Eli Anderson, Feminist Formations
Voir le site internet de l'éditeur Duke University Press
> Sur un thème proche :
Hollywood Pride (2024)
A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Representation and Perseverance in Film
Sujet : Sociology
The New Queer Gothic (2024)
Reading Queer Girls and Women in Contemporary Fiction and Film
de Robyn Ollett
Sujet : Sociology
Trans*Time (2022)
Projecting Transness in European (TV) Series
Dir. Danae Gallo González
Sujet : Sociology
Trans Representations in Contemporary, Popular Cinema (2022)
The Transgender Tipping Point
de Niall Richardson et Frances Smith
Sujet : Sociology