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Adaptation theory and criticism : postmodern literature and cinema in the USA / by Gordon E. Slethaug New York: Bloomsbury, 2014.
Call No: 753.1(73) SLEAuthor: Slethaug, Gordon E. Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: BloomsburyPubDate: 2014PhysDes: vi, 275 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.Subject: ADAPTATIONS ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; CRITICISM ; USA ; THEORY ; POSTMODERNISM AND THE CINEMA ; POSTMODERNISM AND THE CINEMA. USA ; SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION (US, Fred Schepisi, 1993) ; SHORT CUTS (US, Robert Altman, 1993) ; AGE OF INNOCENCE, THE (US, Martin Scorsese, 1993) ; GANGS OF NEW YORK (GG/IT/US, Martin Scorsese, 2002) ; GREAT GATSBY, THE (US/AT, Baz Luhrman, 2013) ; SMOKE SIGNALS (US, Chris Eyre, 1998) ; SMOKE (US, Wayne Wang, 1995) ; DO THE RIGHT THING (US, Spike Lee, 1989) ; BROKEN FLOWERS (US, Jim Jarmusch, 2005) ; SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (US, Rupert Sanders, 2012) ; SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS (US, David Hand, 1937) Summary: "Exploring Hollywood feature films as well as small studio productions, Adaptation Theory and Criticism provides the reader with an informative background on adaptation theory and postmodern methodology and includes eight case studies on more than a dozen American films, some of which have been used before (Age of Innocence, Gangs of New York, The Great Gatsby, and Do the Right Thing) and some that have received less consideration (Six Degrees of Seperation, Smoke, Smoke Signals, Broken Flowers, and various Snow White narratives including Enchanted, Mirrir Mirror, and Snow White and the Huntsman. Useful for both film and literary studies, Gordon Slethaug's Adaptation theory and criticism cogently combines existing scholarship with new theories and insights, encouraging readers to think about intertextual connections between literature and film in the USA." -- BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes bibliographical references (p. [255]-269) and indexISBN: 9781623564407Donation: Senses of CinemaContents: -- introduction -- 1.Modernism/postmodernism and origin/intertextual play in adaptation theory -- Modernism: High culture, poetic genius, and influence -- Postmodernism: Textuality, intertextuality, pastiche/bricolage, freeplay, and interculturalism -- 2.Adaptation, surplus value, and supplementation in Six Degrees of Separation and Short Cuts -- Surplus, supplementation, and transformation in John Guare's Six Degrees of Separation -- E Pluribus Unum: Raymond Carver's fiction and Robert Altman's Short Cuts -- 3.Intertextual doubling in The Age of Innocence, Gangs of New York, and The Great Gatsby -- Tribalization as intertextual symptom: Scorcese's The Age of Innocence and Gangs of New York -- Ironized intertextuality: The Age of Innocence and The Great Gatsby -- 4.Freeplay, citation, and ethnocriticism: Single and multiple sources in Smoke Signals, SMOKE, and Do the Right Thing --
-- Ethnocriticism and adaptation: Sherman Alexie's The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven and Chris Eyre's Smoke Signals -- From Lee to Auster and Wang: Postmodern indeterminacy and racial relations in Do the Right Thing and SMOKE -- Beyond Auster's short story: Do the Right Thing and SMOKE -- 5.Palimpsests and bricolage: Playful and serious citation in Broken Flowers and Snow White's offspring -- Palimpsest, play, and the myth of filiation in Broken Flowers: Clues, signs, and referential mania -- Snow White's offspring: The hyper-palimpsest -- 6.Conclusion -- works cited -- index --
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Adaptations: from short story to big screen : 35 great stories that have inspired great films / edited by Stephanie Harrison New York: Three Rivers Press, c2005.
Call No: 753.1 ADAAuthor: Harrison, Stephanie Edition: First editionSource: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: Three Rivers PressPubDate: c2005PhysDes: xix, 619 p. : ill. ; 24 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; SHORT CUTS (US, Robert Altman, 1993) ; BLOWUP (UK/IT, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966) ; FACE IN THE CROWD, A (US, Elia Kazan, 1957) ; REAR WINDOW (US, Alfred Hitchcock, 1954) ; [TWO THOUSAND AND ONE] 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (UK, Stanley Kubrick, 1968) ; A.I: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (US, Steven Spielberg, 2001) ; MINORITY REPORT (US, Steven Spielberg, 2002) ; FREAKS (US, Tod Browning, 1932) ; FLY, THE (US, Kurt Neumann, 1958) ; RE-ANIMATOR (US, Stuart Gordon, 1985) ; STAGECOACH (US, John Ford, 1939) ; MAN CALLED HORSE, A (US, Elliot Silverstein, 1970) ; SMOKE SIGNALS (US, Chris Eyre, 1998) ; AMERICAN SPLENDOR (US, Shari Springer Berman & Robert Pulcini, 2003) ; GHOST WORLD (US, Terry Zwigoff, 2001) ; ALL ABOUT EVE (US, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1950) ; MEET JOHN DOE (US, Frank Capra, 1941) ; WILD ONE, THE (US, Laslo Benedek, 1953) ; TOMORROW (US, Joseph Anthony, 1972) ; BRINGING UP BABY (US, Howard Hawks, 1938) ; SWIMMER, THE (US, Frank Perry, 1968) ; KILLERS, THE (US, Robert Siodmak, 1946) ; FALLEN IDOL, THE (UK, Carol Reed, 1948) ; MEMENTO (US, Christopher Nolan, 2000) ; CHRISTMAS STORY, A (US, Bob Clark, 1983) ; FIELD OF DREAMS (US, Phil Alden Robinson, 1989) ; RASHOMON (JA, Akira Kurosawa, 1950) ; DAMA S SOBACKOJ (UR, Iosif Hejfic, 1960) ; LADY WITH THE LITTLE DOG (UR, Iosif Hejfic, 1960) ; DARK EYES [OCI CIORNIE] (IT/UR, Nikita Mihalkov, 1987) ; DARK EYES [OCI CIORNIE] (IT/UR, Nikita Mihalkov, 1987) ; SMOKE (US, Wayne Wang, 1995) ; JESUS' SON (US, Alison Maclean, 1999) ; IN THE BEDROOM (US, Todd Field, 2001) ; [MISTER] MR BLANDINGS BUILDS HIS DREAM HOUSE (US, H.C. Potter, 1948) ; MY FRIEND FLICKA (US, Harold D. Schuster, 1943) ; LAST TIME I SAW PARIS, THE (US, Richard Brooks, 1954) ; SMOOTH TALK (US/UK, Joyce Chopra, 1985) Summary: "Adaptations gathers together 35 pieces that have been the basis for films, many from giants of American literature (Hemingway, Fitzgerald) and many that have not been in print for decades (the stories that inspired Bringing Up Baby, Meet John Doe, and All About Eve)." "Categorized by genre, and featuring movies by master directors such as Steven Spielberg, Stanley Kubrick, Robert Altman, Frank Capra, and John Ford, as well as relative newcomers such as Chris Eyre and Christopher Nolan, Adaptations offers insight into the process of turning a short story into a screenplay, one that, when successful, doesn't take drastic liberties with the text upon which it is based, but doesn't mirror its source material too closely either."--BOOK JACKET.Notes: Also issued onlineISBN: 1400053145Contents: -- Jerry and Molly and Sam / Raymond Carver -- Blow-up / Julio Corta´zar -- Your Arkansas traveler / Budd Schulberg -- Rear window / Cornell Woolrich -- The sentinel / Arthur C. Clarke -- Supertoys last all summer long / Brian Aldiss -- The minority report / Philip K. Dick -- Spurs / Tod Robbins -- The fly / George Langelaan -- Herbert West--Reanimator: six shots by moonlight / H.P. Lovecraft -- Stage to Lordsburg / Ernest Haycox -- A man called Horse / Dorothy M. Johnson -- This is what it means to say Phoenix, Arizona / Sherman Alexie -- The Harvey Pekar name story / Harvey Pekar -- Ghost world-- Chapter 5: "Hubba Hubba" / Daniel Clowes -- The wisdom of Eve / Mary Orr -- A reputation / Richard Edward Connell -- Mr. Blandings builds his castle / Eric Hodgins -- Cyclists' raid / Frank Rooney -- Tomorrow / William Faulkner -- Bringing up Baby / Hagar Wilde -- Babylon revisited / F. Scott Fitzgerald -- The swimmer / John Cheever -- The killers / Ernest Hemingway -- The basement room / Graham Greene -- Memento mori / Jonathan Nolan -- Red Ryder nails the Hammond Kid / Jean Shepherd -- My friend Flicka / Mary O'Hara -- Shoeless Joe Jackson comes to Iowa / W.P. Kinsella -- In a grove / Ryunosuke Akutagawa -- The lady with the pet dog / Anton Chekhov -- Where are you going, where have you been? / Joyce Carol Oates -- Auggie Wren's Christmas story / Paul Auster -- Emergency / Denis Johnson -- Killings / Andre Dubus --
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Genre, gender, race and world cinema : an anthology / Edited by Julie F. Codell Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2006.
Call No: 62(082) GENAuthor: Codell, Julie F. Source: USPlace: Malden, MassachusettsPublisher: Blackwell PublishingPubDate: 2006PhysDes: ix, 474 pages ; 25 cmSubject: BOLLYWOOD ; CULTURE AND THE CINEMA ; CULTURAL IMPERIALISM ; FILM NOIR ; GENDER AND THE CINEMA ; GENRES ; WORLD CINEMA ; GLOBALISATION ; RACIAL ISSUES AND THE CINEMA ; IDENTITY IN FILMS ; IDEOLOGY AND THE CINEMA ; IRAN ; MELODRAMA ; NATIONAL CULTURE AND THE CINEMA ; NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE CINEMA ; RACIAL ISSUES AND THE CINEMA ; RACIAL ISSUES IN FILMS ; ETHNIC GROUPS IN FILMS ; WORLD CINEMA ; KAIGE, CHEN ; NAIR, MIRA ; CRYING GAME, THE (UK, Neil Jordan, 1992) ; FIGHT CLUB (US, David Fincher, 1999) ; HSI YEN (TZ, Ang Lee, 1993) ; INDIAN IN THE CUPBOARD, THE (US, Frank Oz, 1995) ; ORLANDO (UK/RU/FR/NE, Sally Potter, 1992) ; POCAHONTAS (US, Mike Gabriel & Eric Goldberg, 1995) ; SMOKE SIGNALS (US, Chris Eyre, 1998) ; ALL ABOUT MY MOTHER (SP/FR, Pedro Almodovar, 1999)
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TODO SOBRE MI MADRE ; TODO SOBRE MI MADRE (SP/FR, Pedro Almodovar, 1999) ; TRAFFIC (US, Steven Soderbergh, 2000) Summary: "a collection of essays that introduces the study of film theory through contemporay issues...Using four topics- genre, gender, race, and 'third cinema' - the book encourages critical discussions of films by students with a beginner's knowledge of film history. American, Asian, European and African cinema are all included."ISBN: 1405132337Contents: Preface -- General introduction: film and identities --; Part I Genres: ever-changing hybrids -- Introduction and further reading -- Conclusion: a semantic/syntactic/pragmatic approach to genre: Rick Altman -- Film bodies: gender, genre, and excess: Linda Williams -- The body and Spain: Pedro Almodovar's 'All About My Mother': Ernesto R. Acevedo-Munoz -- Enjoy your fight! - 'Fight Club' as a symptom of the network society: Bulent Diken and Carsten Bagge Laustsen -- Film and changing technologies: Laura Kipnis -- Postmodern cinema and Hollywood culture in an age of corporate colonization: Carl Boggs and Tom Pollard --; Part II Genders: more than two -- Introduction and further reading -- Mobile identities, digital stars, and post cinematic selves: Mary Flanagan -- "Nothing is as it seems": re-viewing 'The Crying Game': Lola Young -- Crying over the melodramatic penis: melodrama and male nudity in the films of the 90s: Peter Lehman -- Travels with Sally Potter's 'Orlando': gender, narrative, movement: Julianne Pidduck -- Body matters: the politics of provocation in Mira Nair's films: Alpana Sharma -- Cowgirl Tales: Yvonne Tasker --; Part III Race: stereotypes and multiple realisms -- Introduction and further reading -- The family changes colour: interracial families in contemporary Hollywood cinema: Nicola Evans -- Black on white: film noir and the epistemology of race in recent African American cinema: Dan Flory -- Becoming Asian American: Chan is missing: Peter X. Feng -- 'The Wedding Banquet': global Chinese cinema and the Asian American experience: Gina Marchetti -- Another fine example of the oral tradition? Identification and subversion in Sherman Alexie's 'Smoke Signals': Jhon Warren Gilroy -- Playing Indian in the nineties: 'Pocahontas' and 'The Indian in the Cupboard': Pauline Turner Strong -- "You are alright, but..." Individual and collective representations of Mexicans, Latinos, Anglo-Americans and African-Americans in Steven Soderbergh's 'Traffic': Deborah Shaw --; Part IV World cinema: joining local and global -- Introduction and further reading -- Theorizing "third-world" film spectatorship: the case of Iran and Iranian cinema: Hamid Naficy -- The open image: poetic realism and the new Iranian cinema: Shohini Chaudhuri and Howard Finn -- The seductions of homecoming: place, authenticity and Chen Kaige's 'Temptress Moon': Rey Chow -- Cultural identity and diaspora in contemporary Hong Kong cinema: Julian Stringer -- "And yet my heart is still Indian": the Bombay film industry and the (H)indianization of Hollywood: Tejaswini Ganti -- Future past: integrating orality into Francophone West African film: Melissa Thackway -- Acknowledgements
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SMOKE SIGNALS : (US, Chris Eyre, 1998)
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