The woman’s picture, the male trauma narrative, and mind-game films—three ways that American cinema tests the limits: of what victims can suffer, what the body can bear, and what the mind can understand. Usually considered both marginal and excessive, these genres, modes, or tendencies in contemporary Hollywood have more in common than might at first appear. They tell us much about the way America engages in dialogue with its own divided nature and nation, demonstrated across its most cherished and characteristic of art forms: the movies.
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Studying Italian Cinema
$4,050 -
Hooray for Hollywood!: A Cultural Encyclopedia of America’s Dream Factory
$8,505 -
Studying British Cinema: The 1980s
$1,463 -
Anthology Film and World Cinema
$1,348 -
Splice 7.3: The Science Fiction Issue
$900 -
Studying British Cinema: The 1970’s
$1,350 -
Thoughts on Shorts: Reflections on Writing the Short Film
$5,175 -
The Cinema of Catherine Breillat
$5,040 -
The Global Guide to Media Labs
$1,303 -
Cinema’s Inter-Sensory Encounters: Krzysztof Kieslowski and Claire Denis
$5,400 -
Shifting Layers: New Perspectives in Media Archaeology Across Digital Media and Audiovisual Arts
$855 -
James Mason
$1,215 -
The Audacious Josephine Baker: Blackness, Power and Visual Pleasure
$1,925 -
An Introduction to European Horror Cinema
$1,575 -
Race in American Film: Voices and Visions That Shaped a Nation
$13,230 -
Flash Architecture and Integration
$2,100 -
1939: Hollywood’s Greatest Year
$2,025 -
Cinema And Sexuality
$1,753 -
European Cinema and Continental Philosophy: Film As Thought Experiment
$5,400 -
Studying Action-adventure Cinema
$1,125

