TY - BOOK AU - Corinth,Henri TI - Andrzej Zulawski: Abject Cinema T2 - Eastern European screen cultures SN - 9789048562688 AV - PN1998.3.Z77 D4 2024 U1 - 791.4302/33092 23 PY - 2024///] CY - Amsterdam PB - Amsterdam University Press KW - Motion picture producers and directors KW - Poland KW - AUP Wetenschappelijk KW - Amsterdam University Press KW - Film Studies KW - Film, Media, and Communication KW - Linguistics KW - Philosophy KW - Psychology KW - ART / Film & Video KW - bisacsh KW - Film Studies, Slavic/Eastern European studies, semiotics, psychology N1 - Frontmatter --; Table of Contents --; Acknowledgements --; Part I Landscapes of Affect --; 1 Kristeva and Żuławski --; 2 Żuławski and Ideology --; 3 The Maternal --; 4 Landscapes of Affect --; Part II Abject Cinema --; 5 “Children Are an Ism” --; 6 Coenesthesia --; 7 Borders --; 8 Performance --; 9 Loss of Subjecthood --; 10 Returning to the Womb --; 11 The Image of Film Violence --; 12 The Sight of a Corpse --; Part III Unfathomable, Darkness—A Conclusion --; Conclusion --; Filmography --; Bibliography --; Index of Subjects --; Index of Names --; Index of Titles; restricted access N2 - Andrzej Zulawski (1940–2016) was born in Lwów, Poland (now Lviv, Ukraine) and educated in Paris. From 1971 to 2015 he directed thirteen feature films. Andrzej Zulawski: Abject Cinema interprets the director’s oeuvre through the methodological lens of Julia Kristeva’s notions of the abject and the semiotic chora, with the narratives in Zulawski’s filmography amounting to an experience of the abject -being not merely the state of affairs among the films’ subjects but also of their collective regression to a semiotic non-verbal state divorced from the symbolic verbal-visual language employed by cinema as a whole. It further contextualizes this interpretation with the sociopolitical circumstances from which Zulawski emerged, specifically his Polish homeland occupied by various foreign powers, his emigre status in France, and the influence of the Polish Romantic movement UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9789048562688?locatt=mode:legacy UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9789048562688 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9789048562688/original ER -