Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema

From the early 1990s onwards, a trend in French cinema took the body, especially the violated body, as the starting point of an engagement with the spectator which moved beyond the traditional ocular relationship between film and viewer and into a more physical mode. The reception of these films has...

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Main Author: Parsons, Martin John Anthony
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13914/
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author Parsons, Martin John Anthony
author_facet Parsons, Martin John Anthony
author_sort Parsons, Martin John Anthony
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description From the early 1990s onwards, a trend in French cinema took the body, especially the violated body, as the starting point of an engagement with the spectator which moved beyond the traditional ocular relationship between film and viewer and into a more physical mode. The reception of these films has been difficult, for a variety of reasons. In this dissertation we look at how this trend, herein described as Contemporary French Extreme Cinema, has been damaged by its critical reception, by its refusal to occupy understood cinematic spaces, and by censorship. The basis for the analysis herein rests in the phenomenological film analyses of Linda Williams, Vivian Sobchack and Laura Marks, through which we draw a new model for film spectatorship based on an awareness of genre and an understanding of the haptic rapport which these films engender. Analysis of this trend is complex, with a multitude of possible approaches, but this dissertation offers a series of suggestions which will hopefully assist in the navigation of such difficult territory. While it would be imprudent to claim to offer any firm conclusions on a trend that, we argue, might not yet be finished, this dissertation nonetheless suggests where the failures might lie, how these might be reclaimed, and how these films might have influenced French cinema as it stands today.
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spelling nottingham-139142025-02-28T11:27:41Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13914/ Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema Parsons, Martin John Anthony From the early 1990s onwards, a trend in French cinema took the body, especially the violated body, as the starting point of an engagement with the spectator which moved beyond the traditional ocular relationship between film and viewer and into a more physical mode. The reception of these films has been difficult, for a variety of reasons. In this dissertation we look at how this trend, herein described as Contemporary French Extreme Cinema, has been damaged by its critical reception, by its refusal to occupy understood cinematic spaces, and by censorship. The basis for the analysis herein rests in the phenomenological film analyses of Linda Williams, Vivian Sobchack and Laura Marks, through which we draw a new model for film spectatorship based on an awareness of genre and an understanding of the haptic rapport which these films engender. Analysis of this trend is complex, with a multitude of possible approaches, but this dissertation offers a series of suggestions which will hopefully assist in the navigation of such difficult territory. While it would be imprudent to claim to offer any firm conclusions on a trend that, we argue, might not yet be finished, this dissertation nonetheless suggests where the failures might lie, how these might be reclaimed, and how these films might have influenced French cinema as it stands today. 2013 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13914/1/Dissertation_FINAL_Martin_Parsons.pdf Parsons, Martin John Anthony (2013) Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema. MA(Res) thesis, University of Nottingham. Extreme cinema French Sex Violence Sexual Violence Hapticity Spectatorship Physicality
spellingShingle Extreme cinema
French
Sex
Violence
Sexual Violence
Hapticity
Spectatorship
Physicality
Parsons, Martin John Anthony
Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title_full Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title_fullStr Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title_full_unstemmed Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title_short Reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary French extreme cinema
title_sort reading the razor blade: the problematic reception of contemporary french extreme cinema
topic Extreme cinema
French
Sex
Violence
Sexual Violence
Hapticity
Spectatorship
Physicality
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13914/