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Showing papers by "David Bordwell published in 1988"


Book
01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this paper, Bordwell questions the popular image of Ozu as the traditional Japanese artisan and examines the aesthetic nature and functions of his cinema, including the aesthetic strategies and cultural significance.
Abstract: Over the last two decades, Yasujiro Ozu has won international recognition as a major filmmaker. Combining biographical information with discussions of the films' aesthetic strategies and cultural significance, David Bordwell questions the popular image of Ozu as the traditional Japanese artisan and examines the aesthetic nature and functions of his cinema.

96 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the last decade, film and television studies have developed a tradition of morphological analysis of the Proppian approach to film narratology as discussed by the authors, which has become a reference point in the theory of narrative.
Abstract: When Vladimir Propp died in 1970, his name had become a reference point in the theory of narrative. The Morphology of the Folktale, published in Russian in 1928, appeared in English thirty years later and was soon brought out in other languages. Anthropologists and folklorists were quick to praise, criticize, test, and revise his claims.' A. J. Greimas, Tzvetan Todorov, Claude Bremond, and Roland Barthes made the Morphology one point of departure for structuralist narratology, and homage is still paid in the poststructuralist era.2 Soon after the publication of the 1968 revised English edition of the Morphology, Peter Wollen suggested that Propp might be a fruitful source for cinema semiotics, and over the last decade, film and television studies have developed a tradition of morphological analysis.3 As recently as 1985, a writer in The Cinema Book allotted several large-format pages to Proppian analysis.4 For many critics, Propp has become the Aristotle of film narratology; yet his influence has come at the cost of serious misunderstandings. The English editions of the Morphology pose problems of injudicious editing and faulty translation. More problematically, film scholars have taken Propp out of context and recast him almost out of recognition. There are good reasons to regard the "Proppian" approach to film narrative as a dead end. The argument for the morphological approach, although usually tacit, seems to run this way5:

16 citations


Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1988

6 citations





Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1988

1 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1988-Screen

1 citations