Available Formats
Experiencing Cinema: Participatory Film Cultures, Immersive Media and the Experience Economy
By (Author) Emma Pett
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
25th February 2021
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Popular culture
Film, TV and Radio industries
302.2343
Hardback
248
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
499g
Film is often conceived as a medium that is watched rather than experienced. Existing studies of film audiences, and of media reception more broadly, have revealed the complexity of viewing practices and cultures surrounding cinema-going and its exhibition spaces. Experiencing Cinema offers the first in-depth study of participant engagement with a range of experiential media forms derived from cinema culture. From sing-a-long screenings to theatrical extravaganzas, a broad spectrum of alternative film-going practices and immersive spaces are explored and analysed in this original audience study. Moving from intimate community gatherings to blockbuster urban venues, from isolated farmhouses to Olympic stadia, Experiencing Cinema considers the lure and value of these popular events. Often attracting a diverse, intergenerational range of participants, from early-adopter urban hipsters to DIY rural communities, the growing demand for participatory cinema within the contemporary marketplace is analysed alongside broader debates circulating around the move away from traditional tiered seating and increased audience mobility and the de-centring of the film text.
This is in my judgement a really rich and valuable book. Built on a combination of deep and wide scholarly reading, linked critically with some really good empirical research into different areas of alternative cinema, it will bid fair to become the key book in the area for some time. * Martin Baker, Emeritus Professor of Film and Television Studies, Aberystwyth University, UK *
Emma Pett is Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of East Anglia, UK. She has published on the reception and regulation of films in The New Review of Film and Television Studies, The Journal of British Cinema and Television and Transnational Cinemas, and has chapters in Live Cinema: Cultures, Economies, Aesthetics (Bloomsbury, 2017) and Princess Mononoke: Understanding Studio Ghiblis Monster Princess (Bloomsbury, 2018).