This paper aims to extend recent work in feminist phenomenological film theory by contextualizing its turn to the tactile within the longer history of the philosophy of the senses and their training. Following the work of Vivian Sobchack, a recent generation of feminist film theorists have drawn on phenomenological understandings of embodiment to argue that while film criticism has focused, almost exclusively, on the visible, intelligible qualities of cinema, our experience of cinema is shaped by our bodily sensations. As Sobchack (2004, 63) argues, ‘we do not see any movie only through our eyes’; rather, we ‘feel films with our whole bodily being’. This turn from the dominant sense of sight to that of touch represents a shift in critical p...
The rise of haptic technologies in the media industries—from touchscreens that touch back, to vibrat...
My thesis is a collection of philosophical essays on the sense of touch. I argue first that touch is...
This thesis explores the possibilities of reconciling corporeal and visceral film experience with th...
This paper aims to extend recent work in feminist phenomenological film theory by contextualizing it...
The film Female Perversions (1996) has received mixed reviews in newspapers and popular magazines. C...
This article analyses the experiences of film-viewing and making by reference to the sense of. For v...
The article explores the reciprocal relationship between images and viewers by considering the relat...
The objective of this thesis is to consider the corporeal presence of spectator as specific to film ...
Although anthropological and critical social theory have a long interest in sensory experience, work...
When we talk of 'seeing' a film, we do not refer to a purely visual experience. Rather, to understan...
AbstractPrema Purigali Prabhakar"How Skin Can See:" A Phenomenological and Cultural Account of Touch...
Touch is the first sense to develop in the womb, yet often it is overlooked. The Senses of Touch exa...
This paper attempts to look into the concept of ���Mechanical Perception��� in Early film theory, sp...
© 2019 Nonie Denise MayAcross the diverse, albeit cumulative, works of Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan,...
Today, the concept of dramaturgy refers primarily to the space of theater or, more broadly, to perfo...
The rise of haptic technologies in the media industries—from touchscreens that touch back, to vibrat...
My thesis is a collection of philosophical essays on the sense of touch. I argue first that touch is...
This thesis explores the possibilities of reconciling corporeal and visceral film experience with th...
This paper aims to extend recent work in feminist phenomenological film theory by contextualizing it...
The film Female Perversions (1996) has received mixed reviews in newspapers and popular magazines. C...
This article analyses the experiences of film-viewing and making by reference to the sense of. For v...
The article explores the reciprocal relationship between images and viewers by considering the relat...
The objective of this thesis is to consider the corporeal presence of spectator as specific to film ...
Although anthropological and critical social theory have a long interest in sensory experience, work...
When we talk of 'seeing' a film, we do not refer to a purely visual experience. Rather, to understan...
AbstractPrema Purigali Prabhakar"How Skin Can See:" A Phenomenological and Cultural Account of Touch...
Touch is the first sense to develop in the womb, yet often it is overlooked. The Senses of Touch exa...
This paper attempts to look into the concept of ���Mechanical Perception��� in Early film theory, sp...
© 2019 Nonie Denise MayAcross the diverse, albeit cumulative, works of Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan,...
Today, the concept of dramaturgy refers primarily to the space of theater or, more broadly, to perfo...
The rise of haptic technologies in the media industries—from touchscreens that touch back, to vibrat...
My thesis is a collection of philosophical essays on the sense of touch. I argue first that touch is...
This thesis explores the possibilities of reconciling corporeal and visceral film experience with th...