Adrian Gargett, in his paper Nolan\u27s Memento, Memory, and Recognition, analyses Christopher Nolan\u27s film Memento. Gargett employs Deleuzian film theory in a general consideration of the relationship between thought and film. Gargett proposes that Memento acts as a type of intellectual stimulant that has the viewer deciphering a puzzle in process: what is identified in Memento is the way in which memory and the work of memory are presented in the film\u27s narrative construct. In his analysis Gargett argues that memory is not added on; rather, it is already present, and that the Deleuzian abstract quality does not lie in the negative relation to representation, externality, and figure. And it is there in the way memory is present: ab...
This paper will set out a dualistic pattern, exemplified by (1) a neurobiological account of memory ...
In old mnemonic systems, like the Memory Palaces (Ricci) and the Memory Circles (Llull), the general...
At the end of the flashback, quite late in Memento, when we finally get to see what Leonard remember...
Ambiguous, complex and innovative, Christopher Nolan's Memento has intrigued audiences and critics s...
To say that Memento (2000) is thought-provoking would be, at best, an understatement. One of the mai...
Although Christopher Nolan’s Memento (2000) has been the subject of numerous critical examinations, ...
Christopher Nolan’s Memento (2000) is a complex neo-noir motion picture, which thematizes the interr...
Christopher Nolan’s Memento illustrates and explores two roles that memory plays in human life. The ...
Sebuah narasi didalam film membantu pengarang menyampaikan pikiran dan imajinasinya dengan cara dan ...
This article demonstrates that Memento (Christopher Nolan, 2000) meets both conditions of Paisley Li...
This master’s thesis deals with the filmography of Christopher Nolan and his style, and it analyses ...
Film is the ‘art of time’, and film and memory’s generative affiliation is founded in this relation...
Without endorsing an auteur theory of film in any strong sense, one can reasonably divide Christophe...
This paper argues that narrative techniques in Absalom, Absalom! demonstrate Faulkners anticipation ...
British-American filmmaker Christopher Nolan taps into the simulacra in several of his renowned work...
This paper will set out a dualistic pattern, exemplified by (1) a neurobiological account of memory ...
In old mnemonic systems, like the Memory Palaces (Ricci) and the Memory Circles (Llull), the general...
At the end of the flashback, quite late in Memento, when we finally get to see what Leonard remember...
Ambiguous, complex and innovative, Christopher Nolan's Memento has intrigued audiences and critics s...
To say that Memento (2000) is thought-provoking would be, at best, an understatement. One of the mai...
Although Christopher Nolan’s Memento (2000) has been the subject of numerous critical examinations, ...
Christopher Nolan’s Memento (2000) is a complex neo-noir motion picture, which thematizes the interr...
Christopher Nolan’s Memento illustrates and explores two roles that memory plays in human life. The ...
Sebuah narasi didalam film membantu pengarang menyampaikan pikiran dan imajinasinya dengan cara dan ...
This article demonstrates that Memento (Christopher Nolan, 2000) meets both conditions of Paisley Li...
This master’s thesis deals with the filmography of Christopher Nolan and his style, and it analyses ...
Film is the ‘art of time’, and film and memory’s generative affiliation is founded in this relation...
Without endorsing an auteur theory of film in any strong sense, one can reasonably divide Christophe...
This paper argues that narrative techniques in Absalom, Absalom! demonstrate Faulkners anticipation ...
British-American filmmaker Christopher Nolan taps into the simulacra in several of his renowned work...
This paper will set out a dualistic pattern, exemplified by (1) a neurobiological account of memory ...
In old mnemonic systems, like the Memory Palaces (Ricci) and the Memory Circles (Llull), the general...
At the end of the flashback, quite late in Memento, when we finally get to see what Leonard remember...