Available Formats
Kenneth Lonergan: Filmmaker and Philosopher
By (Author) Todd May
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
6th February 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Individual film directors, film-makers
Film history, theory or criticism
Ethics and moral philosophy
791.430233092
Hardback
184
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
363g
Kenneth Lonergans three filmsYou Can Count on Me (2000), Margaret (2011), and Manchester by the Sea (2016)are rife with philosophical complexities. They challenge simple philosophical approaches to central issues of human behaviour. In particular, they ask questions about how to cope with suffering that one cannot overcome, the role that self- deception plays in peoples lives and how to think about characters who do not embody simplistic moral ideas of virtue and vice. By philosophically engaging with these themes as they unfold in Lonergans films, we are then able to formulate a more nuanced answer to the questions they pose. Kenneth Lonergan: Philosophical Filmmaker will draw from Lonergans films and plays, along with the philosophical literature on the topics that they explore. The rich history of philosophical reflection surrounding these areas enables the reader to determine how the themes central to Lonergans work have combined to create a rich cinematic oeuvre.
With a lucidity typical of all his work, Todd May engages with Lonergans cinema through moral philosophy, but with none of the technical knowledge from ethics or film studies that might alienate a non-expert. Beginning with only Nietzsches famous adage concerning suffering and survival, this impressive study expands to find an equally philosophical spirit at work throughout Lonergans art. * Professor John Maoilearca, Professor of Film, Kingston University, UK. *
Todd Mays accessible and engaging book will drive the uninitiated into the films of Kenneth Lonergan and enhance the experience of those who are already admirers. May connects philosophy to the films in ways that both professional scholars and laypersons can appreciate. One wishes more books like this existed. * Paul Schofield, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Bates College, USA *
Todd May is Class of 1941 Memorial Professor of Philosophy at Clemson University, USA. He is author of fourteen books of philosophy including The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism (1994), Reconsidering Difference (1997), Death (The Art of Living) (1997), Gilles Deleuze: An Introduction (2011), A Significant Life: Human Life in a Silent Universe (2016) andThe Fragile Life: Accepting Our Vulnerability (2017). He is also the philosophical adviser on NBC's hit TV show The Good Place.