Ecocritique is a practice of radical questioning, as essential to the critical armoury as feminism and postcolonialism have become. Like them, it extends beyond judgements about texts with clear ecological themes, demonstrating the significance of ecocriticism for any advanced understanding of cultural forms. Anecdotal method is ecocritical because it focuses on encounters, concentrated moments of crisis when social ordering and ecological forces clash. The anecdote's power to produce events, meanings and history forms a methodological entry to aesthetic politics. Anecdotal Evidence provides an outline of the need for and principles of anecdotal method; a case study of eco-critical themes in Hollywood films shaped by the Global Financial Crisis; and a confrontation with mass image databases of social and streaming media that due to their scale and organisation appear at first immune to anecdotal method. Only because the environment has a history is it possible to intervene environmentally. Because we continually misrecognise the historical production of environments, the first task of ecocritique is to bring our formative concept of ecology into crisis. Its final task will be to achieve the good life for everything connected by the historical implication of humans in ecology, and ecology in humans. No politics can be undertaken in our times except through media: ecocritical humanities have a key role in rethinking ecopolitics in the 21st century.
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Anecdotal Evidence reveals the deep intertwining of history and ecology in culture, extending to the infrastructure of streaming video media and mass image databases. An original take on Anthropocene anxieties and technological paranoia, the book proposes that the digital humanities still need the traditional skills of close reading to understand our contemporary condition.
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Introduction
Section 1: Ecocritique and Anecdote
Section 2: Ecocritique, Popular Cinema, and the Global Financial Crisis
2.1 Rango and appearance
2.2 A Glitch in time: Déjà Vu
2.3 Becoming human: Iron Man 2
2.4 Otherwise than human: Oblivion
2.5 The Non-identical world: Source Code
2.6 Those Dying Generations: No Country for Old Men
2.7 Hope in Children of Men and Serenity
2.8 Posthumous Media: The Voyager Animations
Section 3: Ecocritique, Anecdote, and the Mass Image
Part 1: Making the Mass Image
Part 2: Remaking the Mass Image
References
Index
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Anecdotal Evidence offers an impressive, insightful, and unquestionably inspiring set of film critiques that convincingly demonstrates the ecocritical potential of the concept of the anecdote.
"Anecdotal Evidence offers an impressive, insightful, and unquestionably inspiring set of film critiques that convincingly demonstrates the ecocritical potential of the concept of the anecdote." -- Film Philosophy
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Selling point: Offers new concept of ecocritique, an original contribution to eco-critical cultural studies
Selling point: First book to analyse a corpus of films from the era of the global financial crisis
Selling point: Articulates critical analyses of film with analysis of relational databases
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Sean Cubitt, Professor of Screen Studies, University of Melbourne
Sean Cubitt is Professor of Screen Studies at the University of Melbourne. His publications include The Cinema Effect (2004), EcoMedia (2005), The Practice of Light (2014), and Finite Media: Environmental Implications of Digital Technologies (2017). He is a co-editor of The Ecocinema Reader: Theory and Practice (2012) and of Ecomedia: Key Issues (2015). A member of the editorial boards of leading journals arts including
Screen, Cultural Politics, Animation and MIRAJ: The Moving Image Review and Art Journal, he is series editor for Leonardo Books.
Les mer
Selling point: Offers new concept of ecocritique, an original contribution to eco-critical cultural studies
Selling point: First book to analyse a corpus of films from the era of the global financial crisis
Selling point: Articulates critical analyses of film with analysis of relational databases
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190065713
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
680 gr
Høyde
160 mm
Bredde
243 mm
Dybde
39 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
306
Forfatter