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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Kelli Fuery (Dodge College for Film and Media Arts, Chapman University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.294kg ISBN: 9781138590816ISBN 10: 1138590819 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 02 July 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational 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 ContentsChapter 1 Introduction On ‘Being Embedded’ Different Psychoanalytic Thinking and Cognitive Film Studies Embedded and Embodied: A Relational Distinction Chapter 2 A Theory of Thinking for Moving Image Experience Toward a (Meta)Theory of Thinking From Drive to Feeling: Melanie Klein and Projective Identification Satisfaction and Frustration: Bion’s Apparatus for Thinking On the capacity to tolerate frustration Chapter 3 Wandering Reverie and the Aesthetic Experience of Being Adrift 85 A note on wandering Wandering as Reverie Devious Journeying: Reverie and Spectatorship in Walkabout Reverie as Spacings: The Irregular turning of aesthetic experience The Affect of Spacing in Don’t Look Now Aimless Passing: Being Embedded through Dreaming Chapter 4 Metaphor, the Analytic Field, and the Embedded Spectator Metaphor, 1970s Film Theory and Beyond Antonino Ferro and Giuseppe Civitarese’s Metaphor within the Analytic Field Analytic Field Theory and Field Theories of Cinema The Embedded Spectator Chapter 5 Group Experience, Collective Memory and Dreaming Bion’s Experiences in Groups The Task of the Group Memory Work and Memory Texts: Force Majeure and Prisons Memory Archive Immersion and Being Embedded with regard to Groups and Memory Dreams and Memories The relevance of Bion’s revision on dreaming Chapter 6 Linking, Intentionality and the Container-Contained Phenomenology: Experience, Consciousness, Intentionality Husserlian beginnings and Casebier’s ‘in-between’ qualities Sobchack’s Reversible Intentionality in Rabbit Proof Fence Bion and Arendt: Linking, Emotion, and Thought Cinema as Container-Contained Container-Contained in Unforgiven Chapter 7 Transformation: The Idiomatic Encounter and Use of Moving Image as Object Bion’s Concept of O The Importance of Invariance in Transformation Antonioni’s Blow-Up The Moving Image as Transitional and Transformational Object An Aesthetic of Being: Westworld Chapter 8 Being Embedded: Rhizome, Decalcomania and Containment Reverie as Space and Rhizome Rhizome Decalcomania Negative Capability Time, Territory, and Surface Containment BoyhoodReviewsThis is a game-changing book, and one that lays down an important challenge to scholars of the moving image. In setting out the structuring silences and omissions made within the field whenever a time-worn version of psychoanalysis is brought to bear, Fuery makes a compelling case for the importance of object relational ideas in shaping lived and psychological experiences of film and television. Providing a lively, engaging, erudite, and spirited approach, this book shows how a sustained understanding of the work of Wilfred Bion affords new perspectives on the emotional invitations of moving image encounters. Fuery deftly defines complex ideas in accessible ways, supplying a route into object relations theory for newcomers. At the same time, though, she weaves a sophisticated, nuanced argument about the layers of theoretical complexity at work in her analysis, bringing in the ideas of analysts such as Melanie Klein and Christopher Bollas, as well as the work of film philosophers and psychoanalytic critics more broadly. The book adds much needed depth to debates about psychic experience and emotional lives in relation to screen culture, showing how psychoanalysis expands our understanding of cognitive processes and offers new approaches to theorising audiences. This will be a must-read for anyone invested in moving image theory and criticism.-Caroline Bainbridge, PhD, PFHEA, Professor of Culture and Psychoanalysis, University of Roehampton and Film Editor, International Journal of Psychoanalysis Author InformationKelli Fuery is Assistant Professor at Dodge College for Film and Media Arts, Chapman University, USA. She is the author of New Media: Culture and Image (2009) and co-author of Visual Cultures and Critical Theory (2003). She has also published widely on the themes of visual culture, psychoanalysis and critical theory. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |