This volume of new essays energizes a growing movement in film theory which questions and seeks to overturn many of the assumptions that have governed film theory for the last twenty years. The book brings together film scholars and philosophers in a united commitment to the standards of argumentation that characterize analytic philosophy rather than a single doctrinal approach. The essays address such topics as authorship, emotion, ideology, representation, and expression in film.
Introduction: Film Theory and Philosophy,Richard Allen and Murray Smith PART 1 What is Cinematic Representation 1. The Film Theory that Never Was: A Nervous Manifesto,Gregory Currie 2. On Pictures and Photographs: Objections Answered,Kendall L. Walton 3. Looking at Motion Pictures,Richard Allen 4. Sound, Epistemology, Film,Edward Branigan PART 2 Meaning, Authorship, and Intention 5. Cinematic Authorship,Paisley Livingston 6. Film Authorship and Collaboration,Berys Gaut 7. Fiction, Non-Fiction, and the Film of Presumptive Assertion: A Conceptual Analysis,Noel Carroll 8. What is Non-Fiction Cinema?,Trevor Ponech 9. On Film Narrative and Narrative Meaning,George Wilson PART 3 Ideology and Ethics 10. The Ideological Impediment: Epistemology, Feminism, and Film Theory,Jennifer Hammett 11. Ideology and Film Culture,Hector Rodriguez 12. Aesthetics and Politics in Contemporary Black Film Theory,Tommy Lott PART 4 Aesthetics 13. Music in the Movies: A Philosophical Enquiry,Peter Kivy 14. Personal Agency Theories of Expressiveness and the Movies,Flo Leibowitz 15. Aristotelians onSpeed: Paradoxes of Genre in the Context of Cinema,Deborah Knight PART 5 Emotional Response 16. Notes on Spectator Emotilc`