Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

In Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema, Christopher Carter examines paradoxical rhetoric in visual culture, analyzing movies that immerse viewers in violent narratives while examining the ethics of the transaction. Featuring the films of Michael Haneke, Atom Egoyan, Icíar Bollaín, Paul Thomas Anderson, and Ryan Coogler, Carter analyzes how personal conflict intermingles with the inherent violence of warfare, transnational economics, labor exploitation, and racism in genres ranging from horror to historical recreation and from depictions of genocide to records of police brutality. These films, Carter argues, reflect on their construction, distribution, and audience engagement, emphasizing the material design and the economics of rhetoric in ways most films do not.
 
Ultimately, Metafilm reframes materialism as a multimodal composing-in-action, or reflexive materialism, focusing on movies that dramatize their entanglement in economic and historical trauma while provoking forms of resistance during and after viewing. Carter contends that even as we recognize the division of social power in the films, we must also recognize how the concept is subversive and eludes control. In looking at the interplay between the films’ content and their production, circulation, and reception, Carter explores how the films persuade us to identify with onscreen worlds before probing our expectations—validating some, rejecting others, and sometimes proposing new ways of watching altogether.
 

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Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

In Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema, Christopher Carter examines paradoxical rhetoric in visual culture, analyzing movies that immerse viewers in violent narratives while examining the ethics of the transaction. Featuring the films of Michael Haneke, Atom Egoyan, Icíar Bollaín, Paul Thomas Anderson, and Ryan Coogler, Carter analyzes how personal conflict intermingles with the inherent violence of warfare, transnational economics, labor exploitation, and racism in genres ranging from horror to historical recreation and from depictions of genocide to records of police brutality. These films, Carter argues, reflect on their construction, distribution, and audience engagement, emphasizing the material design and the economics of rhetoric in ways most films do not.
 
Ultimately, Metafilm reframes materialism as a multimodal composing-in-action, or reflexive materialism, focusing on movies that dramatize their entanglement in economic and historical trauma while provoking forms of resistance during and after viewing. Carter contends that even as we recognize the division of social power in the films, we must also recognize how the concept is subversive and eludes control. In looking at the interplay between the films’ content and their production, circulation, and reception, Carter explores how the films persuade us to identify with onscreen worlds before probing our expectations—validating some, rejecting others, and sometimes proposing new ways of watching altogether.
 

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Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

by Christopher Carter
Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema

by Christopher Carter

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Overview

In Metafilm: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema, Christopher Carter examines paradoxical rhetoric in visual culture, analyzing movies that immerse viewers in violent narratives while examining the ethics of the transaction. Featuring the films of Michael Haneke, Atom Egoyan, Icíar Bollaín, Paul Thomas Anderson, and Ryan Coogler, Carter analyzes how personal conflict intermingles with the inherent violence of warfare, transnational economics, labor exploitation, and racism in genres ranging from horror to historical recreation and from depictions of genocide to records of police brutality. These films, Carter argues, reflect on their construction, distribution, and audience engagement, emphasizing the material design and the economics of rhetoric in ways most films do not.
 
Ultimately, Metafilm reframes materialism as a multimodal composing-in-action, or reflexive materialism, focusing on movies that dramatize their entanglement in economic and historical trauma while provoking forms of resistance during and after viewing. Carter contends that even as we recognize the division of social power in the films, we must also recognize how the concept is subversive and eludes control. In looking at the interplay between the films’ content and their production, circulation, and reception, Carter explores how the films persuade us to identify with onscreen worlds before probing our expectations—validating some, rejecting others, and sometimes proposing new ways of watching altogether.
 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814276327
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 07/12/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 204
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Christopher Carter is Composition Director and Professor of English at the University of Cincinnati. He is the author most recently of Rhetorical Exposures: Confrontation and Contradiction in U.S. Social Documentary Photography.

Table of Contents

METAFILM: Materialist Rhetoric and Reflexive Cinema by Christopher Carter

Half Title Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

INTRODUCTION: REFLEXIVE MATERIALISM

MATERIALISMS

THE TEMPERATURE OF DELIVERY

REFLEXIVE RHETORIC

THE WHOLE WORLD IS WATCHING

COMING ATTRACTIONS

CHAPTER 1: REFUSAL

A KNOWING WINK

PAUL’S PARADOX

ANTICLIMAX

RHETORIC OF THE IRREVOCABLE

SAFE DISTANCE

CHAPTER 2: MEDIATED MOURNING

TRUE IN SPIRIT

(DIS)FIGURING HISTORY

WHO REMEMBERS THE EXTERMINATION OFTHE ARMENIANS?

WE WILL BRING NO PROOFS

CHAPTER 3: MATERIAL CORRESPONDENCES

THE HEAVENS WEEP

CORRESPONDING SUBSTANCES

LIKE A DREAM

CHAPTER 4: SOUND AFFECT

THE RHETORIC OF METADIEGETIC SOUND

THE STICKINESS OF FEELING STUCK

THE FANTASY OF CHORAL ATTUNEMENT

“BUT IT DID HAPPEN”

CHAPTER 5: WITNESS

THE RIGHT TO DOCUMENT

STAGING RACE

RE/CREATION

OUTSIDE THE METREON

CONCLUSION: UN CERTAIN REGARD (OR, FOUR WAYS OF LOOKING BACK)

REGARDING MATERIALITY

REGARDING HISTORY

REGARDING COLLECTIVES

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

NOTES TO CHAPTER 1

NOTES TO CHAPTER 2

NOTES TO CHAPTER 3

NOTES TO CHAPTER 4

NOTES TO CHAPTER 5

NOTES TO THE CONCLUSION

WORKS CITED

INDEX

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