Home Arts Stories
book: Stories
Book Open Access

Stories

Screen Narrative in the Digital Era
  • Edited by: Ian Christie and Annie Oever
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2018
View more publications by Amsterdam University Press

About this book

This book identifies new phenomena in the fields of complex narration, puzzle film, and transmedia storytelling.

Author / Editor information

Christie Ian :

Ian Christie is a film historian and curator, currently Professor of Film and Media History at Birkbeck, University of London. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and has been a visiting professor and fellow at universities in Chicago, Tampa, Stockholm, Canberra, Paris and Olomouc, and at Gresham College in London 2017-21, as well as Slade Professor of Fine Art at Cambridge University in 2006. He has written and edited books on Powell and Pressburger, Russian cinema, Martin Scorsese and Terry Gilliam; and contributed to many exhibitionsOever Annie :

Annie van den Oever is a Professor of Film at the University of Groningen and a Senior Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg (since March 2024). Recent books: Doing Experimental Media Archaeology. Theory(De Gruyter, 2022, with Andreas Fickers); and Visual Media, Distortions, and the Grotesque as a Dominant Format Today (AUP 2024, forthcoming).

Reviews

"There are very few book series that fully keep to what they promised, as "The Key Debates" does. An incredible effort in critically covering wide regions of our field -- with their traditional assets and their sudden innovations. Visual storytelling poses puzzling questions: the seventh volume of the series tries to answer them." - Francesco Casetti, Yale University "Rather than explaining our previous accounts of story-telling and story-viewing, this exciting collection opens up the field to important new questions about complex, large, and transmedia narratives. It is a valuable contribution to research on how and why we engage with stories." - Janet Staiger, University of Texas "An indispensable collection of essays exploring the complexities of storytelling in today's multi-faceted media environment. This volume constitutes another important contribution to ongoing debates in Film and Media Studies provided by a remarkable book series." - Frank Kessler, Utrecht University


Open Access Download PDF
1

Open Access Download PDF
5

Open Access Download PDF
7

Open Access Download PDF
9

Ian Christie and Annie van den Oever
Open Access Download PDF
11
Part I. Theory in Contemporary Contexts Reassessing Key Questions

Jan Baetens
Open Access Download PDF
27

Vincent Amiel
Open Access Download PDF
45

The Attractiveness of Impossible Puzzle Films
Miklós Kiss and Steven Willemsen
Open Access Download PDF
55

Or, What Do We Want Psychology and Physiology to Tell Us about Screen Stories?
Ian Christie
Open Access Download PDF
85

New Practices and Audiences
Melanie Schiller
Open Access Download PDF
97
Part II. History and Analyses

José Moure
Open Access Download PDF
111

About David Lynch’s Twin Peaks Season 3
Dominique Chateau
Open Access Download PDF
119

Popular Narrative after Game of Thrones
Sandra Laugier
Open Access Download PDF
143
PART III. Discussions

John Ellis and Annie van den Oever
Open Access Download PDF
155

Roger Odin
Open Access Download PDF
167
PART IV. Practicalities

Working with Chantal Akerman on La captive – A Dialogue
Eric de Kuyper and Annie van den Oever
Open Access Download PDF
175

An Intertextual Universe?
Ian Christie
Open Access Download PDF
181

Luke McKernan
Open Access Download PDF
183

Robert Ziegler and Ian Christie
Open Access Download PDF
193

Open Access Download PDF
199

Open Access Download PDF
203

Open Access Download PDF
207

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
June 27, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9789048537082
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
208
Illustrations:
26
Other:
25 halftones
Downloaded on 8.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9789048537082/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button