Description
An in-depth, innovative study of the Soviet era film director, Sergei Eisenstein (1898-1948), which reassess his legacy in the twenty-first century using new research.
About the Author
Ian Christie is Fellow of the British Academy and Anniversary Professor of Film and Media History at Birkbeck, University of London, UK. He co-edited the collection Eisenstein Rediscovered (1993) as well as organising a 1988 Oxford conference that preceded it. He has long been active in presenting Eisenstein's silent films with live accompaniment, most recently in Eisenstein on Paper: The Graphic Works (2017). Among many exhibitions, he co-curated Eisenstein: His Life and Work (Oxford, London and Manchester, 1988), and Unexpected Eisenstein (London, 2016). Julia Vassilievais Senior Lecturer in Film and Screen Studies at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Her books include Narrative Psychology (2016), the co-edited Beyond the Essay Film (2020) and After Taste: Cultural Value and the Moving Image (2013), and she has published widely in film and psychology journals. She organised the symposium 'Eisenstein for the Twenty First Century' in June 2018 in Prato, Italy, and co-convened the Eisenstein International Network's first conference in October 2019 at INHA, Paris.
Reviews
This collection of essays by a collection of outstanding scholars allows the full richness of a new Eisenstein to explode out of its pages, provoking a series of new conversations that will have resonance for decades to come. It should be essential reading for any film scholar. -- Emma Widdis, Trinity College, University of Cambridge, UK
Some of today's leading Eisenstein scholars take us on a new exploration of his cinematic world, one we thought we knew, but which turns out to be alive with possibilities. Devouring these essays--with topics ranging from Eisenstein's numerological superstitions to discussions of gender, pathos and landscape--I felt again the delight that comes from diving deeply into his films, in which art and thought constantly provoke each other, creating something bold, surprising, new. -- Anne Nesbet, author of Savage Junctures: Sergei Eisenstein and the Shape of Thinking
This book's title is less of a hyperbole than it may seem. As a theorist, Sergei Eisenstein sought a universal law that explains art's emotional impact across cultures, media and ages. Fluent in four languages, he spent years tracing this law in wildly different areas of knowledge. As these essays show, the quest was not aimless. His writings, like his films, relied on the cognitive power of juxtaposition, collating ideas to collide them-and make some astounding discoveries. All too few of his many projects saw the light of day. This book alerts us to the power of the abandoned, the aborted, the unmade-things worth thinking through again. Eisenstein's once-compact universe, like the one we inhabit, is expanding. -- Yuri Tsivian, author of Ivan the Terrible (BFI Film Classics)
Book Information
ISBN 9781350239616
Author Ian Christie
Format Paperback
Page Count 312
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC