Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History
In Narrated Films, Avrom Fleishman explores the distinctive literary techniques often used by filmmakers to tell their stories. Through close viewings of ingeniously paired films, Fleishman documents five narrational practices in the cinema: voice-over (Orpheus and Sunset Boulevard); dramatized narration, in which the film is a story that one character tells another (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Hiroshima Mon Amour); multiple narration, in which a number of characters tell the story that is the film (Rashomon and Zelig); written narration, whether through diaries or letters (Letter from an Unknown Woman and Diary of a Country Priest); and the cinematic version of interior monologue, which Fleishman terms mindscreen narration (Brief Encounter and Daybreak).

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Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History
In Narrated Films, Avrom Fleishman explores the distinctive literary techniques often used by filmmakers to tell their stories. Through close viewings of ingeniously paired films, Fleishman documents five narrational practices in the cinema: voice-over (Orpheus and Sunset Boulevard); dramatized narration, in which the film is a story that one character tells another (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Hiroshima Mon Amour); multiple narration, in which a number of characters tell the story that is the film (Rashomon and Zelig); written narration, whether through diaries or letters (Letter from an Unknown Woman and Diary of a Country Priest); and the cinematic version of interior monologue, which Fleishman terms mindscreen narration (Brief Encounter and Daybreak).

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Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History

Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History

by Avrom Fleishman
Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History

Narrated Films: Storytelling Situations in Cinema History

by Avrom Fleishman

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Overview

In Narrated Films, Avrom Fleishman explores the distinctive literary techniques often used by filmmakers to tell their stories. Through close viewings of ingeniously paired films, Fleishman documents five narrational practices in the cinema: voice-over (Orpheus and Sunset Boulevard); dramatized narration, in which the film is a story that one character tells another (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Hiroshima Mon Amour); multiple narration, in which a number of characters tell the story that is the film (Rashomon and Zelig); written narration, whether through diaries or letters (Letter from an Unknown Woman and Diary of a Country Priest); and the cinematic version of interior monologue, which Fleishman terms mindscreen narration (Brief Encounter and Daybreak).


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801878657
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 01/05/2004
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Avrom Fleishman is a retired professor of English at the Johns Hopkins University and is the author of numerous books, including The English Historical Novel: Walter Scott to Virginia Woolf, Virginia Woolf: A Critical Reading (both available from Johns Hopkins), The Condition of English, and New Class Culture.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

After an accomplished career as a literary critic, Avrom Fleishman may well have written his most engaging book. Narrated Films explores the way certain films narrate the textuality or dramaturgy of their own telling. His illuminating account of such situated storytelling, and of the issues it raises more generally for an aesthetics of modernist narrative, sustains a new and incisive set of distinctions. The book is bound to make its mark at the never livelier crossroad of literary and film theory.
—Garrett Stewart, James O. Freedman Professor of Letters, University of Iowa

Garrett Stewart

After an accomplished career as a literary critic, Avrom Fleishman may well have written his most engaging book. Narrated Films explores the way certain films narrate the textuality or dramaturgy of their own telling. His illuminating account of such situated storytelling, and of the issues it raises more generally for an aesthetics of modernist narrative, sustains a new and incisive set of distinctions. The book is bound to make its mark at the never livelier crossroad of literary and film theory.

Garrett Stewart, James O. Freedman Professor of Letters, University of Iowa

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