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Toward Cinema and Its Double: Cross-cultural Mimesis
 
 
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Toward Cinema and Its Double: Cross-cultural Mimesis [Paperback]

Laleen Jayamanne (Author)

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Book Description

Arts and Politics of the Everyday December 1, 2001

Toward Cinema and Its Double brings together Laleen Jayamanne's discussions of Australian films, Sri Lankan films, European art films, silent film comedy, contemporary American films, and her own films. While some of her essays are based on formal film analysis, others include more theoretically based ways of considering films. In her studies, Jayamanne employs Walter Benjamin's and Theodor Adorno's concept of mimesis, and Gilles Deleuze's theses on cinematic time and movement as tools for thinking about the cinematic experience in new ways.

Toward Cinema and Its Double addresses a number of issues that have been crucial areas of contention in film studies over the last 20 years—from the role of women both in front of and behind the camera, to the position of the postcolonial subject. Jayamanne demonstrates how arguments over these issues might be inflected in specific ways by specific practices in specific films. In addition, she places all these particularities in time—the time of the critic as well as that of the filmmaker. This collection contains work done over a span of 20 years, and rather than try to efface this time of writing by (re)presenting everything from a single, achieved final viewpoint, it demonstrates the way Jayamanne's own thoughts about film in general, and the various films discussed, have changed over the course of time.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"A Sri Lankan filmmaker, feminist, critic, and theorist who has worked in Australia for the past two decades, Jayamanne collects 15 old and new essays not otherwise easily accessible in most US libraries. The style is personal, even idiosyncratic, with occasional outbursts of self-indulgence. Jayamanne is an astute reader of films and a writer who avoids theoretical obscurity. She is opposed to the overvaluation of theory over criticism, [which has] impoverished the field. She has much to say that is intriguing about a range of subjects: postcolonial film and its travails, the gothic, the sublime, and melodrama, for example. Some sections will find only a small readership because few Americans have access to the films in question; but even the analyses of obscure films are worth reading for the insights they offer on feminist and Australian film and cultural criticism. Several chapters—on Chantal Akerman's films, The Piano, Do The Right Thing, and, above all, what Jayamanne calls the erotics of learning in Blue Steel and The Silence of the Lambs—will be accessible and suggestive for film majors and graduate students. Though no exactly comparable work exists, the book is embedded in the matrix of Australian feminist film criticism exemplified best in the work of Meaghan Morris." —K. Tölölyan (Tololyan), Wesleyan University, Choice, May 2002

(K. Tölölyan (Tololyan), Wesleyan University Choice 2002)

About the Author

Laleen Jayamanne is a lecturer in Cinema Studies at the Power Institute of Fine Arts, University of Sydney. She is also a filmmaker, whose work includes A Song of Ceylon and Rehearsing and a dance video, LAMA. Her articles on her own film work and the work of other independent filmmakers have appeared in Screen, Discourse, and The Australian Journal of Screen Theory.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In framing my comments about Night Cries with those of three Third World filmmakers, I am not appealing to authority. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
slapstick body, mimed metaphor, rented mother, mimetic sensitivity, neorealist moment, neorealist image, optical drama, slapstick time, generic cinema, mimetic capital, allegorical practice, knowing critic, exact fantasy, mimetic contagion, neorealist cinema, mimetic performance, mimetic faculty, formula film, mimetic play, old realism, affection image, mimetic impulse, genre cinema, crystal image, family melodrama
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sri Lankan, Radio Raheem, Jimmy Little, Jeanne Dielman, Buffalo Bill, Song of Ceylon, Agent Starling, Fight the Power, The Good Woman of Bangkok, Night Cries, Spike Lee, Mother Sister, Floating Flower, Golden Robes, Lisa Lyon, Swarna Mallawarachchi, The Silence of the Lambs, Aunt Morag, Convulsive Knowing, Delphine Seyrig, Melodramatic Femininity, Sir Alfred, Unfaithfully Yours, Walter Benjamin, Adrian Martin
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