Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One: Barry Lyndon and Aesthetic Time Chapter Two: Adapting Barry Lyndon: A Tale of Two Auteurs Chapter Three: Paternal Crisis, or: History as Succession Chapter Four: Transnational Topographies: Barry Lyndon as Irish Odyssey Chapter Five: The Rhythm and the Rest: Painting, Cinema, Stillness Chapter Six: Untimely Cinema: Barry Lyndon and the 1970s Bibliography Index
This book examines key issues in transnational cinema, film aesthetics, and Irish history through a reading of Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon (1975).
Maria Pramaggiore is Head of Media Studies at the National University of Ireland at Maynooth. She has published four books, two on Irish cinema, and one a co-authored textbook, Film: A Critical Introduction (2011; with Tom Wallis), now in its third edition.
The book brings together a breadth of scholarship and an innovative
reading of the film to offer new insights ... [which] will benefit
and inspire serious scholars in their research.
*Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television*
Not only a welcome addition to the already bountiful field of
Kubrick studies; it is also the sole monograph specifically
addressing Barry Lyndon ... The publication is also a demonstration
of the value of taking a wide-ranging approach to film research; it
explicates in a clear and practical way how different perspectives
and methodologies can be integrated to build a provocative and
challenging analysis. The great strength of the book is the way the
author weaves a web or network of interrelated elements—history,
novel, biography, culture, colonialism, identity, gender.
*Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media*
A significant contribution to the Kubrick literature. Impeccably
researched and eminently readable, Pramaggiore’s book gives Barry
Lyndon the full and detailed attention it deserves.
*Robert Kolker, Emeritus Professor of English, University of
Maryland, USA, and author of A Cinema of Loneliness, The Altering
Eye, and The Cultures of American Film*
A serious piece of academic study giving in-depth analysis of a
film which has rarely been given this level of (well deserved
attention). Both intensive and expansive, full of interesting
commentary and analysis, this book highlights unconsidered aspects
of the film, showing Barry Lyndon to be on a par with Kubrick’s
other films—a thoughtful, philosophical film, rather than just a
series of pretty pictures.
*Richard Daniels, Stanley Kubrick Archivist, University of the Arts
London, UK*
The critical promise that imbues this book—to make time as visible
as the shape of the frame or the colors of the tableau—is
brilliantly fulfilled in this superb work. A breakthrough in film
analysis, and in the study of Stanley Kubrick.
*Robert Burgoyne, Professor of Film Studies, University of St
Andrews, UK, and author of The Hollywood Historical Film*
Whilst Pramaggiore is very good at illustrating and discussing the
portraits and paintings that might have inspired Kubrick’s
compositions, she appreciates more importantly what is behind these
civilised surfaces, and how Kubrick, like Thackeray in his novel,
is delivering a lethal critique of social hierarchy and hypocrisy
... Forty years on, Barry Lyndon, she proposes, ‘still has
something important to say about image-making, culture and power.’
Over the book’s succeeding pages, she proceeds to demonstrate that
importance with eloquence and authority
*www.neilsinyard.britishtelevisiondrama.org.uk*
Based on research carried out at the Stanley Kubrick Archive at
London College of Communication, Making Time is important because
it is the only monograph specifically focused upon Barry Lyndon.
The publication is also a demonstration of the value of taking a
wide-ranging approach to film research; it explicates in a clear
and practical way how different perspectives and methodologies can
be integrated to build a provocative and challenging analysis. The
great strength of the book is the way the author weaves a web or
network of interrelated elements—history, novel, biography,
culture, colonialism, identity, gender—which together make up Barry
Lyndon.
*Alphaville*
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