Cinema and its Discontents: The Dialectical Nature of Character
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2016 | Film & TV
The ultimate aim of drama is to expose the soul of Character. Dramatists achieve this objective by employing a specific type of conflict known as dialectic, a concept woven throughout Western thinking and-from Homer to 21st century cinema-the basis of all dramatic characters. This study details the history of dialectical thought from Plato to Jung before turning its focus to the development of character in a century of filmmaking. From Chaplin's Tramp to Taxi Driver's Travis Bickle, it examines more than two dozen cinematic characters governed by dialectic-torn between life and death, opposing desires, moralities and wills, their sense of self threatened by others.
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Published by | McFarland & Co Inc |
Edition | Unknown |
ISBN | 9780786475384 |
Language | N/A |
Images And Data Courtesy Of: McFarland & Co Inc.
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