Authors: Trotter
ISBN-13: 9781405159821, ISBN-10: 1405159820
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
Date Published: March 2007
Edition: (Non-applicable)
David Trotter is King Edward VII Professor of English Literature at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of the British Academy. He has written widely about British and American literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including, most recently, the fiction of George Eliot, and aspects of literary Naturalism. The focus of his current research is the history and theory of film. He co-founded the Cambridge Screen Media Group, and is director of its M.Phil. programme in Screen Media and Cultures.
This study revolutionises our understanding of both literary modernism and early cinema. Trotter draws on the most recent scholarship in English and film studies to demonstrate how central cinema as a recording medium was to Joyce, Eliot and Woolf, and how modernist were the concerns of Chaplin and Griffith. This book rewrites the cultural history of the early twentieth century, showing how film technology and modernist aesthetics combined to explore the limits of the human.
Introduction.
Chapter 1. The literature of cinema.
Chapter 2. D.W. Griffith.
Chapter 3. James Joyce and the Automatism of the Photographic Image.
Chapter 4. T.S. Eliot.
Chapter 5. Virginia Woolf.
Chapter 6. Charlie Chaplin.