An edition of Screening the text (1992)

Screening the text

intertextuality in new wave French cinema

  • 1 Want to read

My Reading Lists:

Create a new list

  • 1 Want to read

Buy this book

Last edited by MARC Bot
March 31, 2025 | History
An edition of Screening the text (1992)

Screening the text

intertextuality in new wave French cinema

  • 1 Want to read

Cinema has always been "literary" in its desire to tell stories and in its need to borrow plots and narrative techniques from novels. But the French "new wave" filmmakers of the 1950s self-consciously rejected the idea that film was a mere extension of literature. With subversive techniques that exploded traditional methods of film narrative, new wave directors embraced fragmentation (borrowing from Eisenstein's theory of montage) and alienation (borrowing from Brecht). Their cinema would be the rival, not the apprentice, of literature.

In Screening the Text T. Jefferson Kline argues that the new wave's rebel stance is far more complex and problematic than critics usually acknowledge. Challenging conventional views of film and literature in postwar France, Kline explores the new wave's unconscious--even oedipal--obsession with the tradition it claimed to reject. He focuses on the technique of "screening" a literary or cultural reference, at once revealing and obscuring it with fleeting images and suggestive dialogue. Constructing virtual hieroglyphs from montages of literature, painting, and popular culture, new wave directors found a revolutionary style to match their revolutionary subjects--ambivalence, fragmentation, and the unconscious.

To make his case, Kline establishes the international range of the literary and cultural texts "screened" by Truffaut, Malle, Chabrol, Rohmer, Bresson, Godard, and Resnais. Their fascination with American film is well known, but their references extend well beyond--to classical mythology, to contemporary and classical French literature, and to a variety of Russian, Norwegian, German, and English writers and philosophers. Armed with terms such as auteur and camera stylo, the new cineastes engaged directly in "film writing," even while rejecting the orderliness required by straightforward adaptation of written works.

In exploiting film's unique capacity to be "intertextual" and imitate unconscious narrative, Kline concludes, the new wave directors were skillfully, if ironically, literary.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
308

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Screening the Text
Screening the Text: Intertextuality in New Wave French Cinema
December 17, 2002, The Johns Hopkins University Press
Paperback in English
Cover of: Screening the text
Screening the text: intertextuality in new wave French cinema
1992, Johns Hopkins University Press
in English

Add another edition?

Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 263-296) and index.
Filmography: p. 297-299.

Published in
Baltimore

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
791.43/75/0944
Library of Congress
PN1993.5.F7 K57 1992, PN1993.5.F7.K57 1992

The Physical Object

Pagination
ix, 308 p. :
Number of pages
308

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL1555936M
Internet Archive
screeningtextint0000klin
ISBN 10
0801842670
LCCN
91036323
OCLC/WorldCat
24544962
LibraryThing
9094072
Goodreads
431161

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL4113036W

Community Reviews (0)

No community reviews have been submitted for this work.

Lists

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON