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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Claudia BregerPublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press ISBN: 9780231194198ISBN 10: 0231194196 Pages: 344 Publication Date: 14 April 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews[A] timely study. -- Carlos Kong * Film Quarterly * Her readings of the films she surveys are sharp and insightful...This is a bracing and timely work of scholarship. * Choice * Making Worlds offers a rich array of conceptual and affective tools to stimulate complex readings and imaginative openings, which will be of value to film theorists and ethical philosophers alike. -- ASTRID KORPORAAL, Kingston University, London, U.K. * Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television * Claudia Breger's Making Worlds is a vital contribution to the political dimensions of contemporary film and media theory. Breger's meticulous readings of contemporary cinema create generative openings in impasses that have petrified debate over the past three decades, developing models of cinematic worldmaking for critically feeling out the possibilities of creative assemblage and collective assembly in the face of authoritarian enclosure and humanitarian crisis. -- James Leo Cahill, University of Toronto Claudia Breger's ambitious book draws its energy from our current moment of social dissolution. She sets out to counter collective closures with a focus on affective worldmaking in cinema. Her perceptive readings range from countercultural cinema of the 1960s to contemporary films set in Turkey or Iran. Making Worlds recharges European art cinema, known for its aesthetics of critical defamiliarization, with visual pleasure and possibilities of transnational empathy. -- Deniz Goekturk, University of California, Berkeley Framing storytelling as a form of worlding or world assembly, Breger undertakes uncommon pairings of film not previously thought together, hereby unsettling inherited ways of compartmentalizing their aesthetic, social, and political significance. Making Worlds intervenes in a conjunctural moment when we sorely need compassionate and reasoned voices, calmly and carefully navigating the thicket of our global political morass with attention to the complexities of human identifications and multiple categories of belonging across shared layers of bounded earth. -- Angelica Fenner, author of <i>Race Under Reconstruction in German Cinema: Robert Stemmle's Toxi </i> An exciting journey which reveals veiled alternative worlds within the cinematic universe. * Film Matters * Claudia Breger's Making Worlds is a vital contribution to the political dimensions of contemporary film and media theory. Breger's meticulous readings of contemporary cinema create generative openings in impasses that have petrified debate over the past three decades, developing models of cinematic worldmaking for critically feeling out the possibilities of creative assemblage and collective assembly in the face of authoritarian enclosure and humanitarian crisis. -- James Leo Cahill, University of Toronto [A] timely study. -- Carlos Kong * Film Quarterly * Claudia Breger's Making Worlds is a vital contribution to the political dimensions of contemporary film and media theory. Breger's meticulous readings of contemporary cinema create generative openings in impasses that have petrified debate over the past three decades, developing models of cinematic worldmaking for critically feeling out the possibilities of creative assemblage and collective assembly in the face of authoritarian enclosure and humanitarian crisis. -- James Leo Cahill, University of Toronto Claudia Breger's ambitious book draws its energy from our current moment of social dissolution. She sets out to counter collective closures with a focus on affective worldmaking in cinema. Her perceptive readings range from countercultural cinema of the 1960s to contemporary films set in Turkey or Iran. Making Worlds recharges European art cinema, known for its aesthetics of critical defamiliarization, with visual pleasure and possibilities of transnational empathy. -- Deniz Goekturk, University of California, Berkeley Framing storytelling as a form of worlding or world assembly, Breger undertakes uncommon pairings of film not previously thought together, hereby unsettling inherited ways of compartmentalizing their aesthetic, social, and political significance. Making Worlds intervenes in a conjunctural moment when we sorely need compassionate and reasoned voices, calmly and carefully navigating the thicket of our global political morass with attention to the complexities of human identifications and multiple categories of belonging across shared layers of bounded earth. -- Angelica Fenner, author of <i>Race Under Reconstruction in German Cinema: Robert Stemmle's Toxi </i> Her readings of the films she surveys are sharp and insightful...This is a bracing and timely work of scholarship. * Choice * Framing storytelling as a form of worlding or world assembly, Breger undertakes uncommon pairings of film not previously thought together, hereby unsettling inherited ways of compartmentalizing their aesthetic, social, and political significance. Making Worlds intervenes in a conjunctural moment when we sorely need compassionate and reasoned voices, calmly and carefully navigating the thicket of our global political morass with attention to the complexities of human identifications and multiple categories of belonging across shared layers of bounded earth. -- Angelica Fenner, author of <i>Race Under Reconstruction in German Cinema: Robert Stemmle's Toxi </i> Claudia Breger's ambitious book draws its energy from our current moment of social dissolution. She sets out to counter collective closures with a focus on affective worldmaking in cinema. Her perceptive readings range from countercultural cinema of the 1960s to contemporary films set in Turkey or Iran. Making Worlds recharges European art cinema, known for its aesthetics of critical defamiliarization, with visual pleasure and possibilities of transnational empathy. -- Deniz Goekturk, University of California, Berkeley Claudia Breger's Making Worlds is a vital contribution to the political dimensions of contemporary film and media theory. Breger's meticulous readings of contemporary cinema create generative openings in impasses that have petrified debate over the past three decades, developing models of cinematic worldmaking for critically feeling out the possibilities of creative assemblage and collective assembly in the face of authoritarian enclosure and humanitarian crisis. -- James Leo Cahill, University of Toronto Claudia Breger's Making Worlds is a vital contribution to the political dimensions of contemporary film and media theory. Breger's meticulous readings of contemporary cinema create generative openings in impasses that have petrified debate over the past three decades, developing models of cinematic worldmaking for critically feeling out the possibilities of creative assemblage and collective assembly in the face of authoritarian enclosure and humanitarian crisis. -- James Leo Cahill, University of Toronto Claudia Breger's ambitious book draws its energy from our current moment of social dissolution. She sets out to counter collective closures with a focus on affective worldmaking in cinema. Her perceptive readings range from countercultural cinema of the 1960s to contemporary films set in Turkey or Iran. Making Worlds recharges European art cinema, known for its aesthetics of critical defamiliarization, with visual pleasure and possibilities of transnational empathy. -- Deniz Goekturk, University of California, Berkeley Framing storytelling as a form of worlding or world assembly, Breger undertakes uncommon pairings of film not previously thought together, hereby unsettling inherited ways of compartmentalizing their aesthetic, social, and political significance. Making Worlds intervenes in a conjunctural moment when we sorely need compassionate and reasoned voices, calmly and carefully navigating the thicket of our global political morass with attention to the complexities of human identifications and multiple categories of belonging across shared layers of bounded earth. -- Angelica Fenner, author of <i>Race Under Reconstruction in German Cinema: Robert Stemmle's Toxi </i> Author InformationClaudia Breger is the Villard Professor of German and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. Her books include An Aesthetics of Narrative Performance: Transnational Theater, Literature, and Film in Contemporary Germany (2012). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |