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OverviewThis book presents a new basis for the empirical analysis of film. Starting from an established body of work in film theory, the authors show how a close incorporation of the current state of the art in multimodal theory—including accounts of the syntagmatic and paradigmatic axes of organisation, discourse semantics and advanced ‘layout structure’—builds a methodology by which concrete details of film sequences drive mechanisms for constructing filmic discourse structures. The book introduces the necessary background, the open questions raised, and the method by which analysis can proceed step-by-step. Extensive examples are given from a broad range of films. With this new analytic tool set, the reader will approach the study of film organisation with new levels of detail and probe more deeply into the fundamental question of the discipline: just how is it that films reliably communicate meaning? Full Product DetailsAuthor: John Bateman (University of Bremen, Germany) , Karl-Heinrich Schmidt (University of Wuppertal, Germany) , Karl-Heinrich SchmidtPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9780415754439ISBN 10: 0415754437 Pages: 338 Publication Date: 09 April 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSelected Contents: 1. Analyzing film 2. Semiotics and documents 3. Constructing the semiotic mode of film 4. Christian Metz and the grande syntagmatique of the image track 5. Foundations for analysis: filmic units 6. The paradigmatic organization of film 7. The syntagmatic organization of film 8. Combining syntagmatic and paradigmatic analysis: a detailed example 9. Conclusions and outlookReviewsBy developing a framework for multimodal film analysis, Bateman and Schmidt bridge the gap between accounts that analyse film shot by shot and those accounts who primarily focus on larger units such as scenes. One of the fundamental advances of their socio-semiotic model is that it includes details on lower levels of abstraction as well as highly abstract concepts like filmic genre... As far as I am aware, the concept they develop is unmatched in contemporary film theory and shows how fundamental semiotic concepts still are. -Thomas Metten in Multimodal Communication """By developing a framework for multimodal film analysis, Bateman and Schmidt bridge the gap between accounts that analyse film shot by shot and those accounts who primarily focus on larger units such as scenes. One of the fundamental advances of their socio-semiotic model is that it includes details on lower levels of abstraction as well as highly abstract concepts like filmic genre… As far as I am aware, the concept they develop is unmatched in contemporary film theory and shows how fundamental semiotic concepts still are.""—Thomas Metten in Multimodal Communication" Author InformationJohn Bateman is professor of Applied Linguistics in the English and Linguistics Departments of the University of Bremen, specializing in functional, computational and multimodal linguistics. Karl-Heinrich Schmidt is professor of Electronic Media at the Bergische University of Wuppertal. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |