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Filmspeak: How to Understand Literary Theory by Watching Movies
By (Author) Edward Tomarken
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
22nd November 2012
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Popular culture
Films, cinema
801
Hardback
208
376g
Filmspeak is an accessible, innovative book which uses specific examples to show how once arcane literary and cultural theory has infiltrated popular culture. Theory reaches us in ways we do not even realize. Issues such as the nature of knowledge or truth, the function of personal response in interpretation, the nature of the forces of politics, the female alternative to the male view of the world, are fundamental for all of us. And intelligent analysis of the relationship between literary theory and popular culture can help us to understand our fast-changing world. Here, experienced literary scholar and teacher Edward L. Tomarken explains how it is possible to study the rudiments of literary theory by watching and analyzing contemporary mainstream movies - from The Dark Knight to Kill Bill, and from The Social Network to The Devil Wears Prada. Theorists discussed include Foucault, Jameson, Iser, and Cixous. Tomarken brilliantly demonstrates that anyone can grasp modern literary theory by way of mainstream movies without having to wade through stacks of impenetrable jargon.
The book's principal aim is simply to show how the explanation of theory can be clarified by film, and to lay out some practical guidelines for teaching along these lines. -- Ben Jeffery * Times Literary Supplement *
Edward Tomarken is the author of six books including Genre and Ethics: The Education of an Eighteenth-century Literary Critic and Johnson, "Rasselas," and the Choice of Criticism. He is an emeritus professor of English at Miami University, Ohio.