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Genre/Form: | Criticism, interpretation, etc |
---|---|
Named Person: | Robert Bresson; Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Franz Kafka; Leo Tolstoy, graf; Robert Bresson; Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Franz Kafka; Leo Tolstoy, graf |
Material Type: | Document, Internet resource |
Document Type: | Internet Resource, Computer File |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Sharon Cameron |
ISBN: | 022641390X 022641406X 9780226413907 9780226414065 9780226414232 022641423X |
OCLC Number: | 985395335 |
Description: | 1 online resource (270 pages) : illustrations. |
Responsibility: | Sharon Cameron. |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Original to the point of uniqueness, this is a work of literary and film criticism, but its arguments and insights are fundamentally philosophical. Beneath the vast differences, both within the work of the artists Cameron is so closely studying and between the visions of each of the artists, is a kind of nonconformist unity, a resistance to whatever teaches us to look away, to hide among abstractions, not to see what we are seeing. --Michael Wood, Princeton University" "Original to the point of uniqueness, this is a work of literary and film criticism, but its arguments and insights are fundamentally philosophical. Beneath the vast differences, both within the work of the artists Cameron is so closely studying and between the visions of each of the artists, is a kind of nonconformist unity, a resistance to whatever teaches us to look away, to hide among abstractions, not to see what we are seeing."--Michael Wood, Princeton University -Original to the point of uniqueness, this is a work of literary and film criticism, but its arguments and insights are fundamentally philosophical. Beneath the vast differences, both within the work of the artists Cameron is so closely studying and between the visions of each of the artists, is a kind of nonconformist unity, a resistance to whatever teaches us to look away, to hide among abstractions, not to see what we are seeing.---Michael Wood, Princeton University -The Bond of the Furthest Apart is a powerful description of the ethical dimension of aesthetic experience and is in conversation with some of the best work in continental philosophy. It will have a broad appeal across film studies, literary studies, and philosophy.---Brian Price, University of Toronto "The Bond of the Furthest Apart is a powerful description of the ethical dimension of aesthetic experience and is in conversation with some of the best work in continental philosophy. It will have a broad appeal across film studies, literary studies, and philosophy."--Brian Price, University of Toronto The Bond of the Furthest Apart is a powerful description of the ethical dimension of aesthetic experience and is in conversation with some of the best work in continental philosophy. It will have a broad appeal across film studies, literary studies, and philosophy. --Brian Price, University of Toronto" Read more...


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Related Subjects:(8)
- Bresson, Robert -- Criticism and interpretation.
- Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, -- 1821-1881 -- Criticism and interpretation.
- Kafka, Franz, -- 1883-1924 -- Criticism and interpretation.
- Tolstoy, Leo, -- graf, -- 1828-1910 -- Criticism and interpretation.
- Bresson, Robert.
- Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, -- 1821-1881.
- Kafka, Franz, -- 1883-1924.
- Tolstoy, Leo, -- graf, -- 1828-1910.