The New Brutality Film

Race and Affect in Contemporary Hollywood Cinema

Business & Finance, Accounting, Management, Human Resources & Personnel Management, Skills, Nonfiction, Computers, General Computing
Cover of the book The New Brutality Film by Paul Gormley, Intellect Books Ltd
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Paul Gormley ISBN: 9781841509266
Publisher: Intellect Books Ltd Publication: April 30, 2005
Imprint: Intellect Language: English
Author: Paul Gormley
ISBN: 9781841509266
Publisher: Intellect Books Ltd
Publication: April 30, 2005
Imprint: Intellect
Language: English

The 1990s saw the emergence of a new kind of American cinema, which this book calls the “newbrutality film.” Violence and race have been at the heart of Hollywood cinema since its birth, but the newbrutality film was the first kind of popular American cinema to begin making this relationship explicit. The rise of this cinema coincided with the rebirth of a longneglected strand of film theory, which seeks to unravel the complex relations of affect between the screen and the viewer. This book analyses and connects both of these developments, arguing that films like Falling Down, Reservoir Dogs, Se7en and Strange Days sought to reanimate the affective impact of white Hollywood cinema by miming the power of AfricanAmerican and particularly hiphop culture. The book uses several films as casestudies to chart these developments:

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The 1990s saw the emergence of a new kind of American cinema, which this book calls the “newbrutality film.” Violence and race have been at the heart of Hollywood cinema since its birth, but the newbrutality film was the first kind of popular American cinema to begin making this relationship explicit. The rise of this cinema coincided with the rebirth of a longneglected strand of film theory, which seeks to unravel the complex relations of affect between the screen and the viewer. This book analyses and connects both of these developments, arguing that films like Falling Down, Reservoir Dogs, Se7en and Strange Days sought to reanimate the affective impact of white Hollywood cinema by miming the power of AfricanAmerican and particularly hiphop culture. The book uses several films as casestudies to chart these developments:

More books from Intellect Books Ltd

Cover of the book Being Human by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Directory of World Cinema: Japan 2 by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book World Film Locations: Istanbul by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Transformations by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Broadcasting Diversity by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Traumatic Encounters in Italian Film by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book British TV and Film Culture in the 1950s by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Shakespeare Valued by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Media & Values by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book How to Make Money Scriptwriting by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Holistic Shakespeare by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Europe Faces Europe by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book The Danish Directors by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book A Reflective Practitioner’s Guide to (Mis)Adventures in Drama Education - or - What Was I Thinking? by Paul Gormley
Cover of the book Picturing the Cosmos by Paul Gormley
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy