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y separately published work icon Senses of Cinema periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2002... no. 18 January-February 2002 of Senses of Cinema est. 1999 Senses of Cinema
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Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2002 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
More Australian than Aristotelian : The Australian Bushranger Film, 1904-1914, William D. Routt , single work criticism

This analysis of The Story of the Kelly Gang, Thunderbolt, and The Squatter's Daughter considers early Australian films in the light of American cowboy films, arguing that 'it is the contention of this paper that these relations are the result of certain cultural coincidences between Australia and the Western United States rather than the outcome of direct influence of the one upon the other. Viewed in this light, “the American cinema par excellence” can perhaps be more reasonably understood as the epitome of a global cinema – not an original myth of nationhood, but a story of no-place retold everywhere and at all times, even in terra nullius itself.'

The Lady in the Frame : Two Portraits by Henry James and Jane Campion, David Kelly , single work criticism
'Before looking at two portraits of the same lady by different hands, executed in different media and at different times, I would like to consider an historical coincidence which provided a point of intersection for those media, and take this as my point of departure. Just over thirty years ago, as American film writer Andrew Sarris was popularising his notion of the Cahier du Cinema's 'auteur' theory, French literary theorist Roland Barthes was elaborating his polemical 'theory' of the death of the author — or, rather, 'le morte d'auteur'. So just as Sarris was importing into the discourse on film a serviceable model of textual production and interpretation - and importing not simply from France but equally from an international tradition of literary discourse — Barthes was challenging literary discourse to jettison that model. The theoretical friction implicit in this coincidence bears some reflection, and might prompt some further reflections on the subject of the text as it is shaped in turn by literature and by film.' (Author's abstract)
White Panic or, Mad Max and the Sublime, Meaghan Morris , single work criticism

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 14 Jun 2017 12:03:35
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