Contemporary, Transnational and Intertextual Explorations
Buch, Englisch, 236 Seiten, Format (B × H): 150 mm x 225 mm, Gewicht: 349 g
ISBN: 978-1-78707-155-1
Verlag: Peter Lang
According to Jim Kitses (1969), the Western originally offered American directors a rich canvas to express a singular authorial vision of the American past and its significance. The Western’s recognizable conventions and symbols, rich filmic heritage, and connections to pulp fiction created a widely spoken 'language' for self-expression and supplemented each filmmaker’s power to express their vision of American society. This volume seeks to re-examine the significance of auteur theory for the Western by analysing the auteur director 'unbridled' by traditional definitions or national contexts.
This book renders a complex portrait of the Western auteur by considering the genre in a transnational context. It proposes that narrow views of auteurism should be reconsidered in favour of broader definitions that see meaning created, both intentionally and unintentionally, by a director; by other artistic contributors, including actors and the audience; or through the intersection with other theoretical concepts such as re-allegorization. In so doing, it illuminates the Western as a vehicle for expressing complex ideas of national and transnational identity.
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CONTENTS: Emma Hamilton/Alistair Rolls: Editors on Auteurs: Thoughts on Auteurism from the Frontier – Alex Davis: The Star Auteur: Jimmy Stewart Out West – Tom Ue: Pastiche, Genre and Violence in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds – Emma Hamilton: 'Probably a White Fella': Rolf de Heer, The Tracker and the Limits of Auteurism – Matthew Carter: The Post-apocalyptic Frontier: Reappropriating Western Violence for Feminism in Mad Max: Fury Road – Marek Paryz: Narrative (Il)Logic and the Problem of Character Motivation in Sergio Corbucci’s Revenge Westerns – Lee Broughton: Adaptation, Transculturation and the Western Auteur: Louis L’Amour, Peter Collinson and The Man Called Noon – Maria Ioni?a: Auteurism versus Genre in the Romanian New Wave: Radu Jude’s Interpretation of Western Tropes in Aferim! – Alistair Rolls/Emma Hamilton/Clara Sitbon: Auteur is French for Author, too: Translating Other Afterthoughts Inspired by King Vidor’s Duel in the Sun into French Literature – Joyleen Christensen: 'East meets West meets East again': The Good, The Bad, The Weird and the Transnational Dialogue of Auteurs – Omar Ahmed: The Indian Western: Revisiting Sholay and the Dacoit Film as Transnational Exegesis.