Cinematic Realism
Lukács, Kracauer and Theories of the Filmic Real
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:15th Dec '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The issue of cinematic realism is important because the issue of realism, of the relationship between representation and reality, is important. If some forms of representation are closer to reality – however defined – than others, then this may also be the case with forms of filmic representation. In this book, Ian Aitken links the issue of cinematic realism to important questions concerning human experience, analysing the close similarity between the film image and visual perception, and how different theories of realism have sought to uncover the way film’s relation to reality can be understood. Focusing on the writings of Georg Lukács and Siegfried Kracauer, Cinematic Realism is a comprehensive exploration of cinematic realist theory.
For decades Ian Aitken has been thinking deeply about cinematic realism, working tirelessly to interrogate the fundamental premises and limitations of previous theories of representation and reality. This latest book presents the apogee of his thinking, revealing via a series of intense readings of Lukács and Kracauer the implicit philosophical assumptions, methods, and problems behind their theoretical systems. -- Warren Buckland, Oxford Brookes University
ISBN: 9781474441346
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 616g
320 pages