If you are interested in reviewing one of these books, please send an email to reviews@film-philosophy.com, including a short biography and your postal address.
Reviews should be between 1000 and 3000 words long and should be submitted within 6 weeks of receipt of the book. See the submission guidelines section for further information.
If you are an author or publisher and wish your book to be reviewed in Film-Philosophy, please send a copy to the Managing Editor.
BOOKS RECEIVED:
Barnett, Daniel (2008) Movement as Meaning in Experimental Film. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi.
Dassanowsky, Robert von (2005)
Austrian Cinema: A
History.
McFarland: Jefferson, North Carolina, and London.
Flory, Dan
(2008) Philosophy,
Black Film, Film Noir. Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State
University Press.
Herwitz, Daniel
(2008) Aesthetics:
Key Concepts in Philosophy. London and New York: Continuum.
McRoy, Jay
(2008) Nightmare
Japan: Contemporary Japanese Horror
Cinema. Amsterdam
and New York: Rodopi.
Marrati, Paola (2003 /
2008) Gilles
Deleuze: Cinema and Philosophy. Trans. Alisa Hartz. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press.
Morrison, David E., Matthew Kieran, Michael Svannevig and
Sarah Ventress (2007) Media & Values: Intimate
Transgressions in a Changing Moral and Cultural
Landscape. Intellect: Bristol and Chicago.
Nessel, Sabine, Winfried Pauleit, Christine Rüffert,
Karl-Heinz Schmid and Alfred Tews (eds.) (2008)
Wort und Fleisch: Kino
zwischen Text und Körper / Word and Flesh: Cinema Between
Text and the Body.
incl. English version on CD. Bertz & Fischer: Berlin.
Torlasco,
Domietta (2008) The
Time of the Crime: Phenomenology, Psychoanalysis, Italian
Film. Stanford,
California: Stanford University Press.
Tratner, Michael
(2008) Crowd
Scenes: Movies and Mass Politics. New York: Fordham University Press.
FILMS RECEIVED:
Cox, Jennifer (2006) Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman. Artistic License Films. Denmark/USA. TV Mini-Series. 353 mins (DVD).Russo-Young, Ry (2005) Marion, USA, 7 mins.
Hilliard, Justin D. (2006) Wednesday, Striped Socks Productions, 123 mins (NTSC DVD).