This article analyzes several aesthetic, narrative and theoretical topics firstly developed by Alfred Hitchcock in Rebecca (1940) and recently explored and reinvented by Ricardo Vieira Lisboa in his audiovisual essay some visual thoughts about perception in Rebecca (2020). Other specific works and references also come into play, such as the (original and derivative) novels of Daphne du Maurier and Ana Teresa Pereira, other films by Hitchcock, and Stanley Cavell’s conceptualization of the “unknown woman” in classical melodrama. In Hitchcock’s film, the topics under analysis here are narratively acted out in the characters of Rebecca and the unnamed protagonist played by actress Joan Fontaine. However, they also materialize theoretical aspect...
In offering readings of Shakespeare’s tragic women on film, this thesis explores bodies that are cau...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
The present paper demonstrates that “vertigo” is the central theme at the core of Alfred Hitchcock’s...
This article analyzes several aesthetic, narrative and theoretical topics firstly developed by Alfre...
My dissertation explores non-visual experiences of film through a study of the recurring cinematic f...
While cinema and especially the Hollywood Golden Age has constructed a mythology of its own, cinemat...
This dissertation examines depictions of blind characters within four film genres: the classical mel...
The long century of western cinema has produced numerous depictions of invisible bodies – those bodi...
In the story essay, Street Haunting: A London Adventure (1927), Virginia Woolf\u27s narrator descr...
"As film stars, actresses have throughout film history contributed to the film industry’s glamorous ...
This thesis explores how Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca (1940) depicts inadequate and detrimental exampl...
In this book essay I argue that modern and contemporary works of art (i.e. paintings, photographs, f...
My dissertation, Rejected Women in Film Noir, brings an innovative approach to a well-studied cycle ...
The aim of this essay is to analyse Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) from the perspective of the...
This thesis examines the spectral figure in female gothic literature and film. I argue that the spec...
In offering readings of Shakespeare’s tragic women on film, this thesis explores bodies that are cau...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
The present paper demonstrates that “vertigo” is the central theme at the core of Alfred Hitchcock’s...
This article analyzes several aesthetic, narrative and theoretical topics firstly developed by Alfre...
My dissertation explores non-visual experiences of film through a study of the recurring cinematic f...
While cinema and especially the Hollywood Golden Age has constructed a mythology of its own, cinemat...
This dissertation examines depictions of blind characters within four film genres: the classical mel...
The long century of western cinema has produced numerous depictions of invisible bodies – those bodi...
In the story essay, Street Haunting: A London Adventure (1927), Virginia Woolf\u27s narrator descr...
"As film stars, actresses have throughout film history contributed to the film industry’s glamorous ...
This thesis explores how Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca (1940) depicts inadequate and detrimental exampl...
In this book essay I argue that modern and contemporary works of art (i.e. paintings, photographs, f...
My dissertation, Rejected Women in Film Noir, brings an innovative approach to a well-studied cycle ...
The aim of this essay is to analyse Sarah Waters’s novel Affinity (1999) from the perspective of the...
This thesis examines the spectral figure in female gothic literature and film. I argue that the spec...
In offering readings of Shakespeare’s tragic women on film, this thesis explores bodies that are cau...
This article explores Virginia Woolf ’s experiments with the narrative that added impersonality to ...
The present paper demonstrates that “vertigo” is the central theme at the core of Alfred Hitchcock’s...