This essay suggests that collectively watching a film with quiet attention should be considered a kind of joint action. When silently watching a film in a cinema the viewers are not merely engaged in individual actions – watching a film with others often implies a shared activity based on a collective intention in which the viewers jointly attend to a single object: the film. Drawing on recent debates about collective intentionality and shared feelings in analytic philosophy and phenomenology, I show that this import of social philosophy can have important ramifications for film theory and history. Proponents of diverse film theoretical approaches like cultural studies, cognitive film theory, film phenomenology or reception aesthetics consi...
Although audiences are often defined as being multiple, diffuse, and fragmented, in terms of film au...
Julian Hanich untersucht in The Audience Effect, welche Auswirkungen Menschen auf gegenseitige Erfah...
This paper introduces and discusses a new theory of film audiences, which is that the audience, in a...
This essay suggests that collectively watching a film with quiet attention should be considered a ki...
This essay suggests that collectively watching a film with quiet attention should be considered a ki...
Since it is first and foremost the cinema that enables—or at least facilitates—concentrated and focu...
Activist film festivals, films and their audiences come together within a communal space to fulfil a...
This paper places Per Persson's book Understanding Cinema in relation to cognitive film theory and t...
The study of spectatorship is an attempt to understand why we choose to sit in the movie theater sea...
Theories of spectatorship and cinema are nothing new. In fact, they abound. On the other hand, theor...
Through a heterogeneous set of contributions from film studies, psychoanalysis and critical theory, ...
Not peer reviewedThe purpose of this essay was to discover whether or not cinema has the power to ga...
This thesis was inspired by an article by Russell and Levy (2012), which explored the temporal and f...
This article investigates spectatorship of screen media. Early screen media is often thought to nece...
In this thesis the author argues that although questions of the spectator’s corporeal engagement wit...
Although audiences are often defined as being multiple, diffuse, and fragmented, in terms of film au...
Julian Hanich untersucht in The Audience Effect, welche Auswirkungen Menschen auf gegenseitige Erfah...
This paper introduces and discusses a new theory of film audiences, which is that the audience, in a...
This essay suggests that collectively watching a film with quiet attention should be considered a ki...
This essay suggests that collectively watching a film with quiet attention should be considered a ki...
Since it is first and foremost the cinema that enables—or at least facilitates—concentrated and focu...
Activist film festivals, films and their audiences come together within a communal space to fulfil a...
This paper places Per Persson's book Understanding Cinema in relation to cognitive film theory and t...
The study of spectatorship is an attempt to understand why we choose to sit in the movie theater sea...
Theories of spectatorship and cinema are nothing new. In fact, they abound. On the other hand, theor...
Through a heterogeneous set of contributions from film studies, psychoanalysis and critical theory, ...
Not peer reviewedThe purpose of this essay was to discover whether or not cinema has the power to ga...
This thesis was inspired by an article by Russell and Levy (2012), which explored the temporal and f...
This article investigates spectatorship of screen media. Early screen media is often thought to nece...
In this thesis the author argues that although questions of the spectator’s corporeal engagement wit...
Although audiences are often defined as being multiple, diffuse, and fragmented, in terms of film au...
Julian Hanich untersucht in The Audience Effect, welche Auswirkungen Menschen auf gegenseitige Erfah...
This paper introduces and discusses a new theory of film audiences, which is that the audience, in a...