Preface
1. Introduction and Overview
2. Living with Chromophilia
3. Stand or Track?
4. What's in White?
5. Making it Color-Full
6. Musical Hues: Color Harmony
7. Track this Color (in Place)
8. Track that Color (in Movement)
9. Summary
10. Conclusion
Edward Branigan is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of Projecting a Camera: Language-Games in Film Theory; Narrative Comprehension and Film; and Point of View in the Cinema: A Theory of Narration and Subjectivity in Classical Film. With Warren Buckland, he is the editor of The Routledge Encyclopedia of Film Theory. With Charles Wolfe, he is the general editor of the American Film Institute Film Readers series.
'This is an extraordinary achievement -- a major work (perhaps
Branigan's most impressive yet) by one of our most important film
theorists and philosophers. While color studies in film have
exploded over the last fifteen years, most of the work has moved
very cautiously and largely in a historicist fashion, one that
privileges accounts of emerging technological innovations and to a
lesser extent style at the expense of the fascinating perceptual
questions color and color filmmaking raises. Branigan takes these
questions head on and the results are positively stunning. It is
the first book -- in film studies, at least -- to deal at great
length and specificity with the question of color perception and
color style. As I mentioned, most books shy away from stylistic
analysis and the rich philosophical questions that color poses
about perception and, as Branigan indicates very daringly, about
how real the real world is.' -- Brian Price, University of
Toronto
'Branigan takes a Wittgensteinian approach to color that "focuses
not on what color is, but on how it functions, what it does for us,
what we make of it." For our delectation, he offers us an
extraordinarily rich and provocative feast that takes us beyond
cinema to the uses and meanings of color in painting, philosophy
and literature.' -- C.L. Hardin, Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus,
Syracuse University. Author of Color for Philosophers: Unweaving
the Rainbow (1993).
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