Für diesen Artikel ist leider kein Bild verfügbar.

Black Screens, White Frames

Gilles Deleuze and the Filmmaking Machine
Buch | Hardcover
328 Seiten
2025
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-751132-9 (ISBN)
107,20 inkl. MwSt
Black Screens, White Frames offers a new understanding of blank screens in cinema. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's film philosophy and pursuing an affirmative approach to non-images through the concept of the filmmaking machine, author Tanya Shilina-Conte shows how absence can be a productive mode that alters the way we study film.
Black Screens, White Frames offers a new understanding of blank screens in cinema. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's film-philosophy, author Tanya Shilina-Conte provides a detailed examination of non-images from early cinema to post-cinema. In other arts, absence has often been understood in terms of negative characteristics such as lacuna or lack, vacuum or void. Guided by a film-philosophical methodology and experimental modes of cinema rather than a thematic interpretation of its narrative forms, Shilina-Conte advances the concept of the filmmaking machine. She posits the filmmaking machine as an abstract art machine in constant production, which shifts our understanding of absence in cinema from negative to generative theorization. In the course of machinic production, dissociation ceases to be a negative characteristic of failure or incapacity and becomes a creative and capacious gesture of artistic experimentation. Further, she argues that blank screens function as points of deterritorialization within the filmmaking machine. In each chapter, she demonstrates that black or white screens either instigate relative deterritorializations or engender absolute escapes from narrative regimes in cinema. Blank screens in cinema, as machinic mutations and conditions of possibility, do not represent or symbolize but instead activate what is yet to appear and still to become. This reconsideration of non-images allows us to perform a more nuanced analysis of cinematic modes often overlooked in traditional film criticism. The wide-ranging discussion of canonical and rare examples in Shilina-Conte's book uncovers how absence as a productive mode alters the way we study cinema and changes the questions we ask about its history.

Tanya Shilina-Conte is Assistant Professor of Global Film Studies in the Department of English, University at Buffalo. Her essays have appeared in Screen, Film-Philosophy, Frames Cinema Journal, Word & Image, Studia Phænomenologica, In Media Res, Iran Namag, Leitura: Teoria & Prática, Studia Linguistica, Border Visions: Identity and Diaspora in Film, and elsewhere.

Acknowledgments

Fade-In: Introduction. The Filmmaking Machine, or Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Black or White Screen
Chapter 1. Divergent Darkness: The Black Screen in Early Cinema
Chapter 2. Convergent Codes: Fade-ins and Fade-outs as Rational Transitions in Classical Cinema
Chapter 3. The Black or White Screen as a Tool of Deterritorialization in Modern and Experimental Cinema
Chapter 4. One Chapter Less: The Black or White Screen in Minor Cinema
Chapter 5. Folds to Black or White in Minor Cinema and Art Practice
Chapter 6. Alternate Endings: The Black or White Screen in Post-Cinema
Fade-Out: Conclusion. This Video Does Not Exist: The Remix of Black or White Screens and Multimodal Scholarship

Notes
Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 8.1.2025
Zusatzinfo 60 b/w photographs
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 3 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Film / TV
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
ISBN-10 0-19-751132-5 / 0197511325
ISBN-13 978-0-19-751132-9 / 9780197511329
Zustand Neuware
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
wie KI und virtuelle Welten von uns Besitz ergreifen – und die …

von Joachim Bauer

Buch | Hardcover (2023)
Heyne (Verlag)
22,00
eine jüdische Filmgeschichte der Bundesrepublik

von Lea Haselberg; Johannes Praetorius-Rhein; Erik Riedel …

Buch | Hardcover (2023)
Hanser (Verlag)
28,00