By Lesley Brill
Paper - 9780814332757
Price: $29.95s
Subjects: Film and Television: Theory
Series: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Lesley Brill is professor of English at Wayne State University. He is the author of John Huston’s Filmmaking (Cambridge University Press, 1997) and The Hitchcock Romance: Love and Irony in Hitchcock’s Films (Princeton University Press, 1991).
“This is a provocative and original book—the first sustained analysis of the important role crowds play in films. Brill builds upon the powerful intellectual theories of Elias Canetti, transforming Canetti’s philosophical meditations into tools for revealing intricate cinematic structures.”
— Michael Tratner, Bryn Mawr College, author of Deficits and Desires: Economics and Sexuality in Twentieth-Century Literature
“One of the rare works that turn film studies in truly new directions, Brill’s book will also help Canetti studies become an increasingly dynamic interdisciplinary field. Brill’s clear, often poetic prose provides an exciting introduction to Canetti’s protean ideas while using them to explore key cinematic issues. Invigorating and invaluable.”
— David Sterritt, Maryland Institute College of Art, author of Guiltless Pleasures: A David Sterritt Film Reader
“At last, a gifted critic has applied the ideas in Elias Canetti’s Crowds and Power to the study of cinema. Writers on modernity have long associated movies with crowds, but thanks to Lesley Brill we have a full and sophisticated analysis of that relationship. This book is valuable not only as an original commentary on famous films but also as an intelligent introduction to Canetti’s unusual and important work.”
— James Naremore, Indiana University, author of More Than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts
“It is a searching, thoughtful, and illuminating study, written with care and clarity by a leading film scholar and devoted to an area hitherto little explored in film studies. It will surely find wide readership among those interested in the art and the cultural significance of cinema.”
— Gilberto Perez, Sarah Lawrence College, author of The Material Ghost