"Just Images: Ethics and the Cinematic charts current developments within the field of ethics and the role it plays in the study of moving images. It is the first collection of essays of its kind that brings together articles by film and media scholars from three continents, and provides multiple points of engagement of film with present and past histories, politics, myth making, and with core aspects of human subjectivity. The essays co ..."
"The rise of digital media and globalization’s intensification since the 1990s have significantly refigured global cinema’s form and content. The coincidence of digitalization and globalization has produced what this book helps to define and describe as a flourishing border cinema whose aesthetics reflect, construct, intervene in, denature, and reconfigure geopolitical borders. This collection demonstrates how border cinema resists conte ..."
Film Culture in Transition Ser. Film Remakes As Ritual and Disguise: from Carmen to Ripley by AnatZanger Published 2010 ISBN-13: 978-1-281-97268-2, ISBN: 1-281-97268-1
Jerusalem in Israeli Cinema Wanderers, Nomads and the Walking Dead (Hardback) by Anat Y. Zanger Hardcover, Published 2019 by Vallentine Mitchell ISBN-13: 978-1-912676-22-4, ISBN: 1-912676-22-2
Film Remakes as Ritual and Disguise From Carmen to Ripley (Amsterdam University Press - Film Culture in Transition) by AnatZanger Paperback, 158 Pages, Published 2007 by Amsterdam University Press ISBN-13: 978-90-5356-784-5, ISBN: 90-5356-784-4
"The first book-length account of the symbolic chains that link remakes and explain their disguises, Film Remakes as Rituals and Disguise is also the first book to explore how and why these stories are told. Anat Zanger focuses on contemporary retellings of three particular tales-Joan of Arc, Carmen, and Psycho-to reveal what she calls the remake's -rituals of disguise. Joan of Arc, Zanger demonstrates, later appears as the tough, andro ..."
"The first, by Susan McClary, introduces features of musical fusion in both Bizet's
opera and Townsend's version and the second, by Abimbola Cole, focuses on
the image of Carmen as a 'bad girl'. 2. In Clement words, 1989 (1986). 3. Tunes
from the Habanera then become the subject of several auto-quotations by the
opera itself (through the device of repetition). They are also the most quoted and
familiar runes of the opera. 4. Foucaul ..."
Film Culture in Transition Ser. Film Remakes as Ritual and Disguise : From Carmen to Ripley by AnatZanger Published 2006 ISBN-13: 978-90-485-2015-2, ISBN: 90-485-2015-0
Film Culture in Transition Ser. Film Remakes as Ritual and Disguise : From Carmen to Ripley by AnatZanger Published 2006 ISBN-13: 978-90-485-0970-6, ISBN: 90-485-0970-X