Table of Contents for The Films of Stan Brakhage in the American Tradition of Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein and Charles Olson by R. Bruce Elder With Gratitude Acknowledgments Preface From the Givenness of Nature to the Encumbered Modern Body The Signifying Body The Two Bodies in the Philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer: The Body Observed Externally and the Body Experienced from Within The Modern Body's Unbearable Burden of Being The Harmony of Spirit and Body The Primacy of the Subject Body and the Recessiveness of the Subject Body Chapter 1. Four for America: Williams, Pound, Stein, Brakhage Styles of English Metre Meaning and Personal Being: Pound and Brakhage The Seachange: Or, How Pound Came "To Break the Pentameter" Bergson, Hulme, Pound, and Brakhage on the Body and Energy Experience as Energy: A Pattern for Thinking First-Person Singular: Bergson, Hulme, and Brakhage on the Primacy of Individuality Between Self and World: The Image in Hulme, Williams, Brakhage Writing = Composing Sound's Energies, Filmmaking = Composing Light's Energies: Gertrude Stein and Stan Brakhage's Conceptions of Their Media Digressive Interpolation: The Persistence of Emerson's Vision in Stein's Writing and Brakhage's Filmmaking Out of Stein: A Theory of Meaning for Stan Brakhage's Films The Paradox of a Perlocutionary Semantics: Brakhage and Stein on Artistic Meaning The Romanticism of Brakhage's Conception of Meaning Chapter 2. The Conception of the Body in Open Form Poetics and Its Influence on Stan Brakhage's Filmmaking H. Lawrence and the Poetics of Energy Two Crucial Influences on Embodied Poetics: A.N. Whitehead and Maurice Merleau-Ponty A.N. Whitehead's Project: Reconciling Permanence and Flux Olson's Energetics of Embodied Existence Michael McClure's Poetics: The Body Is an Organism. The Universe Is an Organism. A Poem Embodies an Aspect of the Universe's Evolving Form Allen Ginsberg: The Breath, the Voice, and the Poem Action Painting as Performance Glossary Notes Selected Bibliography Stan Brakhage Filmography Index
R. Bruce Elder is an award-winning filmmaker and teaches media at Ryerson University. His book Harmony & Dissent (WLU Press, 2008) received the prestigious Robert Motherwell Book Prize and was named a Choice Outstanding Academic Book. Rudolf Kuenzli described DADA, Surrealism, and the Cinematic Effect (WLU Press, 2013) as "that rare book that casts the early twentieth-century avant-garde in a very new light."
"This challenging and important work demands the attention of film
historians, scholars, critics, theoreticians, and media and culture
commentators. In addition to a select bibliography, there is a
glossary, a filmography, and 58 pages of notes." -- M. Wayne
Cunningham -- Canadian Book Review Annual
"In R. Bruce Elder's The Films of Stan Brakhage in the American
Tradition of Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, and Charles Olson, the
link between Brakhage and the great poetic voices of the 20th
century is persuasively established....Elder's greatest
accomplishment in this book is his ability to interweave varying
disciplines so that the reader becomes acutely aware of the points
of intersection between media. Despite its wide-ranging topic, The
Films of Stan Brakhage is meticulously researched, remarkably
lucid, and provides a compelling argument for Brakhage's place
alongside these great thinkers of the 20th century." -- Christopher
Luna -- Rain Taxi
"Elder evidences a brilliant command of Brakhage's immense
filmography and a lifetime's engagement with the poets he
discusses....In every reading there are traces of the lessons
Brakhage's cinema can offer to open-minded an open-eyed artists. In
fact, The films of Stan Brakhage is less an academic study than the
enthusiastic and fully committed response of one filmmaker to
another and to the modernist tradition they both share." -- P.
Adams Sitney, Princeton University, author ofVisionary Films and
Modernist Montage
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