Description |
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white) |
Contents |
1. Theory, Philosophy and Concepts : Introduction -- 1. Approaching Animation and Animation Studies -- 2. The Cinema of Attractions: Early Film, Its Spectators and the Avant-Garde -- 3. Re-Animating Space -- 4. Realism and Animation -- 5. The Uncanny Valley -- 6. Animation and Performance -- 7. Animation and Memory -- 8. Some Thoughts on Theory-Practice Relationships in Animation Studies |
|
2. Forms and Genres : Introduction -- 9. Absence, Excess and Epistemological Expansion: Towards a Framework for the Study of Animated Documentary -- 10. Experimental Animation -- 11. Features and Shorts -- 12. Advertising and Public Service Films -- 13. Political Animation and Propaganda -- 14. TV Animation and Genre -- 15. Animation and/as Children's Entertainment -- 16. Video Games and Animation |
|
3. Representation: Frames and Contexts : Introduction -- 17. Race, Resistance and Violence in Cartoons -- 18. We're Asian. More Expected of Us: The Model Minority and Whiteness in King of the Hill -- 19. Transformers: Rescue Bots: Representation in Disguise -- 20. Anime's Bodies -- 21. Women in Disney's Animated Features 1989-2005 -- 22. Taking an Appropriate Line: Exploring Representations of Disability within British Mainstream Animation |
|
List of Figures -- List of Contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction |
Summary |
"The Animation Studies Reader brings together both key writings within animation studies and new material in emerging areas of the field. The collection provides readers with seminal texts that ground animation studies within the contexts of theory and aesthetics, form and genre, and issues of representation. The first section collates key readings on animation theory, on how we might conceptualise animation, and on some of the fundamental qualities of animation. New material is also introduced in this section specifically addressing questions raised by the nature, style and materiality of animation. The second section outlines some of the main forms that animation takes, which includes discussions of genre. Although this section cannot be exhaustive, the material chosen is particularly useful as it provides samples of analysis that can illuminate some of the issues the first section of the book raises. The third section focuses on issues of representation and how the medium of animation might have an impact on how bodies, gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity are represented. These representations can only be read through an understanding of the questions that the first two sections of the book raise; we can only decode these representations if we take into account form and genre, and theoretical conceptualisations such as visual pleasure, spectacle, the uncanny, realism etc"--Bloomsbury Screen Studies |
Subject |
Animated films -- History and criticism
|
|
Animated television programs -- History and criticism
|
|
Animated films.
|
|
Animated television programs.
|
Genre/Form |
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Dobson, Nichola, 1976- editor
|
|
Honess Roe, Annabelle, editor
|
|
Ratelle, Amy, editor
|
|
Ruddell, Caroline, editor
|
ISBN |
9781501332623 |
|
1501332627 |
|
9781501332630 |
|
1501332635 |
|