Durational Cinema [electronic resource] : A Short History of Long Films / by Michael Walsh.
Material type:
TextSeries: Experimental Film and Artists' Moving ImagePublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022Edition: 1st ed. 2022Description: XIII, 289 p. online resourceISBN: - 9783030760922
- 791.4361 23
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
E-Books
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National Library of India Online Resource | 791.4361 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | EBK000034855ENG |
1. Introduction -- 2. The New York Avant-Garde of the 1960s -- 3. European Art Cinema in the Years After 1968 -- 4. Gallery and Museum Spaces Since the 1990s -- 5. Durational Documentary.
This book argues for a durational cinema that is distinct from slow cinema, and outlines the history of its three main waves: the New York avant-garde of the 1960s, the European art cinema in the years after 1968, and the international cinema of gallery spaces as well as film festivals since the 1990s. Figures studied include Andy Warhol, Ken Jacobs, Chantal Akerman, Marguerite Duras, Claude Lanzmann, James Benning, Kevin Jerome Everson, Lav Diaz, and Wang Bing.Durational cinema is predominantly minimal, but has from the beginning also included a more encompassing or encyclopedic kind of filmmaking. Durational cinema is characteristically representational, and converges on certain topics (the Holocaust, deindustrialization, the experience of the working class and other marginalized people), but has no one meaning, signifying differently at different moments and in different hands. Warhol's durational cinema of subtraction is quite different from Jacobs's durational cinema of social disgust, while Lav Diaz' durational sublime is quite different from Kevin Jerome Everson's unblinking studies of African-American working people.
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