A close analysis of the specifically cinematographic procedure in Akira Kurosawa’s ‘Dream’ Crows reveals it as an articulated and insightful philosophical statement, endowed with general relevance concerning ‘natural’ perception, phenomenological Erlebnis, mechanical image and aesthetic rapture. The antagonism between the Benjaminian lineage of a mechanical irreducibility of the cinematic image to anthropocentric categories, and the Cartesian tradition of a film-philosophy still relying on the equally irreducible structure of the intentional act, be it the one of a deeply embodied and enworlded counsciousness, in accounting for the essential structure of film and spectator (and their relation), i.e., the antagonism between the decentering p...
By means of Vivian Sobchack's semiotic film phenomenology, we may examine our immediate perceptual a...
Stanley Cavell taught us that films give us a view of a world that differs from the world in which w...
This paper is based on an analysis of the notion of “Optical Unconscious” by Walter Benjamin. It ...
Since the arrival of cinema, film theorists have studied how spectators perceive the representations...
In Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image, Gilles Deleuze distinguishes two regi...
AbstractThe film, the living imagery, traces out its legend before the eyes of the viewer seated the...
Cinema seeks to recreate human experiences, expressing the relation we entertain with our reality. A...
Cinema seeks to recreate human experiences, expressing the relation we entertain with our reality. A...
This paper attempts to look into the concept of ���Mechanical Perception��� in Early film theory, sp...
In his film, Akira Kurosaw included uutobiographical and self-reflexive motifs which are connected w...
Much of the current philosophy of film literature follows Walter Benjamin’s optimistic account and s...
Cavell defines film as the world being present to us while we are absent to it. This very disempower...
This work concerns the idea of the image in contemporary philosophical thought. The author surveys ...
The cinema was born with neorealism.Giuseppe Bertolucci The word ”realism” is the most problematic i...
Sean Cubitt’s book, The Cinema Effect, is an intricate philosophical analysis of film. Following fro...
By means of Vivian Sobchack's semiotic film phenomenology, we may examine our immediate perceptual a...
Stanley Cavell taught us that films give us a view of a world that differs from the world in which w...
This paper is based on an analysis of the notion of “Optical Unconscious” by Walter Benjamin. It ...
Since the arrival of cinema, film theorists have studied how spectators perceive the representations...
In Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image, Gilles Deleuze distinguishes two regi...
AbstractThe film, the living imagery, traces out its legend before the eyes of the viewer seated the...
Cinema seeks to recreate human experiences, expressing the relation we entertain with our reality. A...
Cinema seeks to recreate human experiences, expressing the relation we entertain with our reality. A...
This paper attempts to look into the concept of ���Mechanical Perception��� in Early film theory, sp...
In his film, Akira Kurosaw included uutobiographical and self-reflexive motifs which are connected w...
Much of the current philosophy of film literature follows Walter Benjamin’s optimistic account and s...
Cavell defines film as the world being present to us while we are absent to it. This very disempower...
This work concerns the idea of the image in contemporary philosophical thought. The author surveys ...
The cinema was born with neorealism.Giuseppe Bertolucci The word ”realism” is the most problematic i...
Sean Cubitt’s book, The Cinema Effect, is an intricate philosophical analysis of film. Following fro...
By means of Vivian Sobchack's semiotic film phenomenology, we may examine our immediate perceptual a...
Stanley Cavell taught us that films give us a view of a world that differs from the world in which w...
This paper is based on an analysis of the notion of “Optical Unconscious” by Walter Benjamin. It ...