Moving Picture, Lying Image: Unreliable Cinematic Narratives
By coining the term “unreliable narrator” Wayne Booth hypothesized another agent in his model besides the author, the implicit author, to explain the double coding of narratives where a distorted view of reality and the exposure of this distortion are presented simultaneously. The article deals with...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta Universitatis Sapientiae. Film and Media Studies 2015 (10), p.89-104 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | By coining the term “unreliable narrator” Wayne Booth hypothesized another agent in his model besides the author, the implicit author, to explain the double coding of narratives where a distorted view of reality and the exposure of this distortion are presented simultaneously. The article deals with the applicability of the concept in visual narratives. Since UNRELIABILITYISTRADITIONALLYCONSIDEREDTOBEINTERTWINEDWITHlRSTPERSON narratives, it works through subjective mediators. According to scholarly literature on the subject, the narrator has to be strongly characterized, or INOTHERWORDSANTHROPOMORPHIZED)NTHECASEOFlLMTHEMAINPROBLEM is that the narrator is either missing or the narration cannot be attributed entirely to them. There is a medial rupture where the apparatus mediates the story instead of a character’s oral or written discourse. The present paper focuses on some important but overlooked questions about the nature of CINEMATICSTORYTELLINGTHROUGHARE
EXAMINATIONOFTHELYINGmASHBACKIN Alfred Hitchcock’s Stage Fright. Can a character-narrator control the images THEVIEWERSEES(OWCANTHElLMICIMAGESTILLBEUNRELIABLEWITHOUTHAVING an anthropomorphic narrator? How useful is the term focalization when we AREDEALINGWITHEMBEDDEDCHARACTER
NARRATIVESINlLM |
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ISSN: | 2065-5924 2066-7779 |