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The British Trauma Film Psychoanalysis And Popular British Cinema In The Immediate Aftermath Of The Second World War Adam Plummer

  • SKU: BELL-50216822
The British Trauma Film Psychoanalysis And Popular British Cinema In The Immediate Aftermath Of The Second World War Adam Plummer
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The British Trauma Film Psychoanalysis And Popular British Cinema In The Immediate Aftermath Of The Second World War Adam Plummer instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
File Extension: PDF
File size: 50.55 MB
Author: Adam Plummer
ISBN: 9798765100479, 9798765100509, 8765100476, 8765100506
Language: English
Year: 2023

Product desciption

The British Trauma Film Psychoanalysis And Popular British Cinema In The Immediate Aftermath Of The Second World War Adam Plummer by Adam Plummer 9798765100479, 9798765100509, 8765100476, 8765100506 instant download after payment.

While the historical influence of psychoanalysis on Hollywood cinema has received considerable attention, the same cannot be said for its influence on British cinema. This book examines the central position that psychoanalysis occupies in British cinema in the years immediately following the Second World War.
Plummer uses a critical theory framework to understand the role that psychoanalysis plays in British culture at this time as an historical discourse, and in British cinema as a narrative, a cultural, and an ideological discourse. He defines these as arising within various areas of contemporary psychoanalytic thinking related to traumatic wartime experience, sexual difference, and the interplay between subjectivity and objectivity. He analyses six British films of the period: The Halfway House, Dead of Night, The Seventh Veil, Madonna of the Seven Moons, They Made Me a Fugitive, and Mine Own Executioner and demonstrates how psychoanalysis operates within them as a narrative and formal structuring mechanism. He argues that this engagement enables these films to begin to address the emotional fallout of the war by creating safe representational spaces where contemporary audiences could engage with their own traumatic experiences.
While The British Trauma Film defines psychoanalysis as providing a language for British cinema at this time to confront the effects of wartime trauma, it finds that it also operates within a normalizing ideological system designed to reproduce dominant pre-war relations of political, social, and sexual power. However, in this group of films, this system is often countered by subversive discursive forces that seem to be immanent to the films themselves.

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