Film Hieroglyphs
By (Author) Tom Conley
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st March 2007
United States
Adult Education
Non Fiction
791.4309
Paperback
296
Width 150mm, Height 229mm, Spine 18mm
At a time when traditional film theory privileged the purely visual, Film Hieroglyphs introduced a new way of watching filmexamining the ways in which writing bears on cinema. Author Tom Conley gives special consideration to the points (ruptures) at which story, image, and writing appear to be at odds with one another.Conley hypothesizes that major directorsRenoir, Lang, Walsh, Rossellinitend unconsciously to meld history and ideology. Graphic elements are seen as simultaneously foreign and integral to the field of the image. From these contradictions hieroglyphs emerge that mark a design attesting to a hidden rhetoric and to configurations of meaning that cinema cannot always control.Tom Conley is Lowell Professor of romance languages and visual and environmental studies at Harvard University. Among his books is The Self-Made Map (1996), as well as translations of The Fold (1992) by Gilles Deleuze and In the Metro (2002) by Marc Aug, all available from the University of Minnesota Press.