
- Titel
- The Politics of Monstrous Figures in Contemporary Cinema
- Subtitel
- Witches, Zombies, and Cyborgs Re-enchanting the Ends of the World
- Auteur
- Francesco Sticchi
- Prijs
- € 104,00
- ISBN
- 9789048563388
- Uitvoering
- Hardback
- Aantal pagina's
- 166
- Publicatiedatum
- 20 - 01 - 2025
- Afmetingen
- 15.6 x 23.4 cm
- Discipline
- Film, Media, and Communication
- Ook beschikbaar als
- eBook PDF - € 103,99
Francesco Sticchi
The Politics of Monstrous Figures in Contemporary Cinema
Witches, Zombies, and Cyborgs Re-enchanting the Ends of the World
The book addresses the role of particular monstrous figures and apocalyptic scenarios in contemporary cinema and television and evaluates the political potential of horror and sci-fi narratives in our age of never-ending crises. The purpose of the book is to demonstrate how witches, zombies, and cyborgs (among other figures) present the spectre of new people to come, of new possibilities to inhabit the Earth against the apocalyptic fates of Capitalism.
Written in an ‘acid communist’ spirit, the book shows how it is possible to politicise contemporary popular culture tropes and figures, mapping the anxieties they express and also their undisclosed potential and resources. Balancing personal commentary and academic analyses, the book expresses Deleuzian trust in the power of moving images as instruments that allow us to inhabit the present and believe in this world notwithstanding alleged ends of all worlds.
Written in an ‘acid communist’ spirit, the book shows how it is possible to politicise contemporary popular culture tropes and figures, mapping the anxieties they express and also their undisclosed potential and resources. Balancing personal commentary and academic analyses, the book expresses Deleuzian trust in the power of moving images as instruments that allow us to inhabit the present and believe in this world notwithstanding alleged ends of all worlds.
Auteur
Francesco Sticchi
Francesco Sticchi is a Lecturer in Film Studies at Oxford Brookes University, UK. He is the author of the monograph Mapping Precarity in Contemporary Cinema and Television: Chronotopes of Anxiety, Depression, Expulsion/Extinction (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021) and
works in the field of film-philosophy and ecology of media. He is co-founder of the Cinematic Precarity Research Network.