Description
This entirely new collection of essays is the first book to examine the trilogy as a whole - as well as related products such as The Animatrix and the computer game.
About the Author
Matthew Kapell is Visiting Lecturer of Anthropology at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA. William G. Doty is a retired Professor of Humanities and Religious Studies at the University of Alabama. He has published 16 books and over 70 essays in a wide range of academic journals.
Reviews
"a collection of meaty essays on The Matrix's cultural meaning. Hailing from a range of scholarly disciplines, the contributors speak to the innumerable interpretations the films have inspired. By provoking such passionate and thoughtful responses, from academics and water-cooler philosophers alike, the series has embodied the cyborg dreams, the fears and desires, of Americans at the turn of the millennium. And that's something worth reading about." The Boston Phoenix "a grand tour of all the subjects that matter in film studies: gender and degenderization, race and multiraciality and embedded political values, postmodern deconstruction and reconstruction of hope. Doty and Kapell's collection of articles... will become a classic in film studies." Ginette Paris, PhD. Pacifica Graduate Institute, Spring Journal 2004 "Two things distinguish this useful mapping of the Wachowski brothers' Matrix film trilogy... First, its range of contributors... second, the editors' insistence on conversational writing makes for an uncommon accessibility.... Recommended." Choice, January 2005"
Book Information
ISBN 9780826419095
Author Matthew Wilhelm Kapell
Format Paperback
Page Count 232
Imprint Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 380g
Details
Imprint: |
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. |