Since its release in 1960, Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho has entered the consciousness of our culture as have few other films. Its striking imagery, combined with its universally recognised score, has prompted a wealth of scholarly output. New understanding in the areas of emotion and cognition now affords us the opportunity to re-examine this film from a less familiar vantage point. This article places Psycho within the context of American TV drama of the 1950s and explores the effect of Bernard Herrmann’s music on the emotional responses of the viewer, as well as the possible consequences of this effect upon the literal reading of the film
Music plays a very important role in cinema. In many films by acclaimed director, Alfred Hitchcock, ...
When we talk of 'seeing' a film, we do not refer to a purely visual experience. Rather, to understan...
This study investigates the functional relationship between sound and image within a particular gene...
INTRODUCTION: During the 20th century, psychiatry began to use the cinema as didactic-pedagogical he...
This paper explores Alfred Hitchcock’s use of Freudian psychoanalysis in a number of his films, with...
In this thesis I am going to argue that Alfred Hitchcock could not have made Psycho (1960) to such c...
My project aims to re-analyze the film Rear Windowby director Alfred Hitchcock in relation to its hi...
This paper focuses on the application of auteur theory to the sound design of Alfred Hitchcock’s Psy...
In this talk, I present a reading of Psycho that relates Bernard Herrmann’s iconic score to the elus...
The thesis uses close textual analysis to study and evaluate the television work of Alfred Hitchcock...
Alfred Hitchcock was a prolific director in the early to mid-twentieth century; this thesis examines...
This project aims to interrelate psychoanalytic theory, the constitution of subjectivity and 1940s H...
Cultural producers, including screenwriters and film directors, create fictional and imagined spaces...
Celem niniejszej pracy jest omówienie fenomenu filmu "Psychoza" (1960, reż. Alfred Hitchcock) i jego...
In 1959, American writer Robert Bloch published the novel Psycho, his most famous work. The story ca...
Music plays a very important role in cinema. In many films by acclaimed director, Alfred Hitchcock, ...
When we talk of 'seeing' a film, we do not refer to a purely visual experience. Rather, to understan...
This study investigates the functional relationship between sound and image within a particular gene...
INTRODUCTION: During the 20th century, psychiatry began to use the cinema as didactic-pedagogical he...
This paper explores Alfred Hitchcock’s use of Freudian psychoanalysis in a number of his films, with...
In this thesis I am going to argue that Alfred Hitchcock could not have made Psycho (1960) to such c...
My project aims to re-analyze the film Rear Windowby director Alfred Hitchcock in relation to its hi...
This paper focuses on the application of auteur theory to the sound design of Alfred Hitchcock’s Psy...
In this talk, I present a reading of Psycho that relates Bernard Herrmann’s iconic score to the elus...
The thesis uses close textual analysis to study and evaluate the television work of Alfred Hitchcock...
Alfred Hitchcock was a prolific director in the early to mid-twentieth century; this thesis examines...
This project aims to interrelate psychoanalytic theory, the constitution of subjectivity and 1940s H...
Cultural producers, including screenwriters and film directors, create fictional and imagined spaces...
Celem niniejszej pracy jest omówienie fenomenu filmu "Psychoza" (1960, reż. Alfred Hitchcock) i jego...
In 1959, American writer Robert Bloch published the novel Psycho, his most famous work. The story ca...
Music plays a very important role in cinema. In many films by acclaimed director, Alfred Hitchcock, ...
When we talk of 'seeing' a film, we do not refer to a purely visual experience. Rather, to understan...
This study investigates the functional relationship between sound and image within a particular gene...