This essay takes up a paradoxical problem articulated by Buddhist philosopher, Nishitani Keiji: the eye does not see the eye itself. It argues that film has a therapeutic function by virtue of its ability to draw our attention to this precise aspect of our existential situation; namely, that we alternate between being in our experience and perceiving ourselves in our experience. Or, to borrow Nishitani’s terms, we alternate between the act of seeing and the quest to see the eye itself. The essay explores this theme with reference to specific elements of formal cinematic language. Rather than focus on a particular film or set of films for analysis, we focus instead on how the grammar of cinematic language draws our attention to aspects...
The present essay seeks to analyze the reflections on cinematographic art proposed by Jean-Luc Nancy...
'Nations and peoples are largely the stories they feed themselves. If they tell themselves stories t...
The concept of poetry remains today an ambiguous and divisive issue. The definitions set forward by ...
This essay takes up a paradoxical problem articulated by Buddhist philosopher, Nishitani Keiji: the ...
In this essay, I discuss the evolution of my approach to creating Buddhist contemplative cinema. I b...
This is an extract from a Masters study describing my exploration of the art of film as an inner awa...
Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter… and Spring presents an alternative way of seeing in contemporary fil...
Contents: Early representations of Buddhism in films : Broken blossoms (D.W. Griffith, USA, 1919) an...
As institutionalization and specialization furthers in the modern era, the disciplines of film pract...
Last year the teachers of a course called Religion and Film asked me to lead a discussion of Why H...
This essay studies the embodied experience of paralyzed bodies in Breaking the Waves (1996), The Sea...
Through its mandala-like structure, Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East? (Korea, 2007) provides a...
Do we take more pleasure in the sight of the sufferings of others or their joys? Is it pleasanter to...
This article introduces the main perspectives concerning philosophy through film. Film is understood...
Movies often present a rich encapsulation of the diversity of complex visual information and other s...
The present essay seeks to analyze the reflections on cinematographic art proposed by Jean-Luc Nancy...
'Nations and peoples are largely the stories they feed themselves. If they tell themselves stories t...
The concept of poetry remains today an ambiguous and divisive issue. The definitions set forward by ...
This essay takes up a paradoxical problem articulated by Buddhist philosopher, Nishitani Keiji: the ...
In this essay, I discuss the evolution of my approach to creating Buddhist contemplative cinema. I b...
This is an extract from a Masters study describing my exploration of the art of film as an inner awa...
Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter… and Spring presents an alternative way of seeing in contemporary fil...
Contents: Early representations of Buddhism in films : Broken blossoms (D.W. Griffith, USA, 1919) an...
As institutionalization and specialization furthers in the modern era, the disciplines of film pract...
Last year the teachers of a course called Religion and Film asked me to lead a discussion of Why H...
This essay studies the embodied experience of paralyzed bodies in Breaking the Waves (1996), The Sea...
Through its mandala-like structure, Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East? (Korea, 2007) provides a...
Do we take more pleasure in the sight of the sufferings of others or their joys? Is it pleasanter to...
This article introduces the main perspectives concerning philosophy through film. Film is understood...
Movies often present a rich encapsulation of the diversity of complex visual information and other s...
The present essay seeks to analyze the reflections on cinematographic art proposed by Jean-Luc Nancy...
'Nations and peoples are largely the stories they feed themselves. If they tell themselves stories t...
The concept of poetry remains today an ambiguous and divisive issue. The definitions set forward by ...