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Words on Screen

  • Michel Chion
  • Translated by: Claudia Gorbman
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2017
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Film and Culture Series
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About this book

A poetic investigation into the many ways that the written word is used in cinema

Author / Editor information

Michel Chion is a composer of musique concrète, a filmmaker, an associate professor at the University of Paris III: Sorbonne Nouvelle, and a prolific writer on film, sound, and music. His previous books with Columbia University Press are The Voice in Cinema; Film, a Sound Art; and Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen.

Claudia Gorbman is emeritus professor of film studies at the University of Washington, Tacoma. She is the author of Unheard Melodies: Narrative Film Music, the editor of several books, and the author of many articles on film sound and film music. She has translated four other books by Michel Chion.

Reviews

Ian Balfour, York University:
We too often think of the film as a purely visual medium and the text as a purely verbal one. In his highly original and incisive study, Michel Chion illuminates the overt yet overlooked presence of the fusion of visual and verbal that is writing on the screen. The results are revelatory. Chion tracks the whole panoply of inscriptions in film and makes clear how our understanding of film depends on the force of these inscriptions. You will never again look at or read the titles, intertitles, subtitles, signage, or hand-written letters on screen in quite the same way.

Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University:
We tend to take the appearance of written words in movies for granted. In this book, the great film critic Michel Chion compiles an inventory of textual effects, and shows us just how strange, powerful, and surprising words on screen can be.

Rick Altman, author of A Theory of Narrative:
Words On Screen offers a radically new understanding of cinema. By concentrating on the written word in a very wide variety of films, Chion turns what in the past has always been no more than a passing concern into a full-fledged reading strategy, applicable to films of all periods and types. I never could have imagined that Chion would once again create an entirely new approach to cinema.

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  • Part I: An Infinite Inventory
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  • Part II: Writing, Reading
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  • Part III: Writing in Film Space
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 7, 2017
eBook ISBN:
9780231543453
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
272
Other:
256 b&w film stills
Downloaded on 9.2.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/chio17498/html
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