
The Terministic Screen
by Blakesley, DavidBuy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. ix |
Introduction: The Rhetoric of Film and Film Studies | p. 1 |
Perspectives on Film and Film Theory as Rhetoric | p. 17 |
Mapping the Other: The English Patient, Colonial Rhetoric, and Cinematic Representation | p. 21 |
Rhetoric and the Early Work of Christian Metz: Augmenting Ideological Inquiry in Rhetorical Film Theory and Criticism | p. 37 |
Temptation as Taboo: A Psychorhetorical Reading of The Last Temptation of Christ | p. 55 |
Hyperrhetoric and the Inventive Spectator: Remotivating The Fifth Element | p. 70 |
Time, Space, and Political Identity: Envisioning Community in Triumph of the Will | p. 91 |
On Rhetorical Bodies: Hoop Dreams and Constitutional Discourse | p. 107 |
Rhetorical Perspectives on Film and Culture | p. 125 |
Looking for the Public in the Popular: The Hollywood Blacklist and the Rhetoric of Collective Memory | p. 129 |
Copycat, Serial Murder, and the (De)Terministic Screen Narrative | p. 146 |
Opening the Text: Reading Gender, Christianity, and American Intervention in Deliverance | p. 163 |
From "World Conspiracy" to "Cultural Imperialism": The History of Anti-Plurocratic Rhetoric in German Film | p. 190 |
Perspectives on Films about Rhetoric | p. 211 |
Rhetorical Conditioning: The Manchurian Candidate | p. 213 |
Sophistry, Magic, and the Vilifying Rhetoric of The Usual Suspects | p. 234 |
Textual Trouble in River City: Literacy, Rhetoric, and Consumerism in The Music Man | p. 246 |
Screen Play: Ethos and Dialectics in A Time to Kill | p. 272 |
Postmodern Dialogics in Pulp Fiction: Jules, Ezekiel, and Double-Voiced Discourse | p. 286 |
Contributors | p. 303 |
Index | p. 307 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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