[Deleuze Connections 01] • Deleuze and Horror Film
![[Deleuze Connections 01] • Deleuze and Horror Film](/cover/hTNPJ6ykBZUKQBJg/big/[Deleuze%20Connections%2001]%20%e2%80%a2%20Deleuze%20and%20Horror%20Film.jpg)
- Authors
- Powell, Anna
- Publisher
- Edinburgh University Press
- ISBN
- 9780748617470
- Date
- 2005-06-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.28 MB
- Lang
- en
The horror film analysed from a Deleuzian perspective. This book argues that dominant psychoanalytic approaches to horror films neglect the aesthetics of horror. Yet cinematic devices such as mise-en-scène, editing and sound, are central to the viewer's visceral fear and arousal. Using Deleuze's work on art and film, Anna Powell argues that film viewing is a form of 'altered consciousness' and the experience of viewing horror film an 'embodied event'. The book begins with a critical introduction to the key terms in Deleuzian philosophy and aesthetics. These include: subjectivity/becoming, the body without organs, molecularity, time/duration, affect, movement/rhythm, space, anomaly and schizoanalysis. These concepts are then applied to horror films. Themes such as insanity, sensory response to film, the subject/object, fractured time, the body and cinematography are explored in horror films such as Jacob's Ladder, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Psycho, Silence of the Lambs, The Fly, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Alien Resurrection, The Others, The Shining, Interview with the Vampire, Bram Stoker's Dracula and Nosferatu.