From Box Office to Memory: Telling Stories is not an Innocent Act

Yükleniyor...
Küçük Resim

Tarih

2018

Dergi Başlığı

Dergi ISSN

Cilt Başlığı

Yayıncı

Univ Pittsburgh, Univ Library System

Erişim Hakkı

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Özet

Throughout human history narratives have had crucial function to construct a society with meanings culturally binding its members and to sustain them for generations in society. Epic stories, proverbs, historical tales are such narratives which, in particular, form patterns for the "shared conceptual framework" of members of a culture. Thus narratives, in a broadest sense, circulate within a society through individual memories of its members and serve to communicate and create meanings by operating like language. Films Bread and Roses by Ken Loach (2000) and Maid in Manhattan (2002) by Wayne Wange intersect with their narrative tools indicating how individual and cultural memory overlap and contested globally within international film industry.

Açıklama

WOS: 000454229100004

Anahtar Kelimeler

Cinema, Collective Memory, Film industry, Bread and Roses

Kaynak

Cinej Cinema Journal

WoS Q Değeri

N/A

Scopus Q Değeri

Cilt

7

Sayı

1

Künye