The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays
From What's Up, Tiger Lily? to Match Point, Woody Allen's work has generated substantial interest among scholars and professionals who have written extensively about the director. In The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays, Charles L.P. Silet brings together two-dozen scholarly articles that address the core of Allen's work from a variety of cultural and theoretical perspectives. With a special emphasis on his films of the 1980s, this collection includes both general essays that examine various themes and issues encompassed in Allen's repertoire, as well as discussions that focus on one or two specific films.

General essays explore Allen's Jewish background as a religious and cultural facet, his apparent love affair with New York City, and his relation to various strains of humor—particularly American film humor, but also Allen's broad use of such traditional comic tropes as irony and parody. The essays on individual films include examinations of some of Allen's most significant work including Love and Death, Annie Hall, Interiors, Crimes and Misdemeanors, Hannah and Her Sisters, Manhattan, and Shadows and Fog.

A number of the articles collected here were originally published in now hard to locate places, while others were selected from journals not usually associated with film studies. The result is an anthology of essays that presents an overview of the central issues raised by Allen's body of work as well as a close examination of fourteen individual films that convey these larger themes. A wide-ranging exploration of one of America's most innovative and productive modern directors, this book should appeal to both professionals and students of contemporary film comedy.
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The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays
From What's Up, Tiger Lily? to Match Point, Woody Allen's work has generated substantial interest among scholars and professionals who have written extensively about the director. In The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays, Charles L.P. Silet brings together two-dozen scholarly articles that address the core of Allen's work from a variety of cultural and theoretical perspectives. With a special emphasis on his films of the 1980s, this collection includes both general essays that examine various themes and issues encompassed in Allen's repertoire, as well as discussions that focus on one or two specific films.

General essays explore Allen's Jewish background as a religious and cultural facet, his apparent love affair with New York City, and his relation to various strains of humor—particularly American film humor, but also Allen's broad use of such traditional comic tropes as irony and parody. The essays on individual films include examinations of some of Allen's most significant work including Love and Death, Annie Hall, Interiors, Crimes and Misdemeanors, Hannah and Her Sisters, Manhattan, and Shadows and Fog.

A number of the articles collected here were originally published in now hard to locate places, while others were selected from journals not usually associated with film studies. The result is an anthology of essays that presents an overview of the central issues raised by Allen's body of work as well as a close examination of fourteen individual films that convey these larger themes. A wide-ranging exploration of one of America's most innovative and productive modern directors, this book should appeal to both professionals and students of contemporary film comedy.
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The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays

The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays

The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays

The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays

Hardcover(ANN)

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Overview

From What's Up, Tiger Lily? to Match Point, Woody Allen's work has generated substantial interest among scholars and professionals who have written extensively about the director. In The Films of Woody Allen: Critical Essays, Charles L.P. Silet brings together two-dozen scholarly articles that address the core of Allen's work from a variety of cultural and theoretical perspectives. With a special emphasis on his films of the 1980s, this collection includes both general essays that examine various themes and issues encompassed in Allen's repertoire, as well as discussions that focus on one or two specific films.

General essays explore Allen's Jewish background as a religious and cultural facet, his apparent love affair with New York City, and his relation to various strains of humor—particularly American film humor, but also Allen's broad use of such traditional comic tropes as irony and parody. The essays on individual films include examinations of some of Allen's most significant work including Love and Death, Annie Hall, Interiors, Crimes and Misdemeanors, Hannah and Her Sisters, Manhattan, and Shadows and Fog.

A number of the articles collected here were originally published in now hard to locate places, while others were selected from journals not usually associated with film studies. The result is an anthology of essays that presents an overview of the central issues raised by Allen's body of work as well as a close examination of fourteen individual films that convey these larger themes. A wide-ranging exploration of one of America's most innovative and productive modern directors, this book should appeal to both professionals and students of contemporary film comedy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780810857360
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 07/27/2006
Edition description: ANN
Pages: 358
Product dimensions: 7.28(w) x 9.36(h) x 1.18(d)

About the Author

Charles L. P. Silet teaches film in the Department of English at Iowa State University. He has published 15 books, including The Films of Steven Spielberg (Scarecrow, 2002).

Table of Contents

Part 1 Acknowledgments Part 2 Introduction Part 3 Chronology Part 4 Part 1: General Essays Chapter 5 1. Woody Allen's Lovable Anxious Schlemiels Chapter 6 2. Woody Allen's New York Chapter 7 3. The Narrator and the Narrative: The Evolution of Woody Allen's Film Comedies Chapter 8 4. Woody Allen's Theological Imagination Chapter 9 5. Woody Allen's Comic Irony Chapter 10 6. Self-Deprecation and the Jewish Humor of Woody Allen Chapter 11 7. Beyond Parody: Woody Allen in the 1980s Part 12 Part 2: Individual Films Chapter 13 8. Woody Allen and Fantasy: Play It Again, Sam Chapter 14 9. Love and Death and Food: Woody Allen's Comic Use of Gastronomy Chapter 15 10. Powerful Man Gets Pretty Woman: Style Switching in Annie Hall Chapter 16 11. Annie Hall and the Issue of Modernism Chapter 17 12. Autumn Interiors, or the Ladies Eve: Woody Allen's Bergman Complex Chapter 18 13. Woody Allen's Manhattan and the Ethicity of Narrative Chapter 19 14. Ciao, Woody: Stardust Memories Chapter 20 15. Painful Laughter: The Collapse of Humor in Woody Allen's Stardust Memories Chapter 21 16. Mysterious Illnesses of Human Commodities in Woody Allen and Franz Kafka: Zelig Chapter 22 17. Zelig and Contemporary Theory: Meditation on the Chameleon Text Chapter 23 18. Woody's Mild Irish Rose: Broadway Danny Rose Chapter 24 19. Stardust Memories, The Purple Rose of Cairo, and the Tradition of Metafiction Chapter 25 20. Woody Allen's Interiors: The Dark Side of Hannah and Her Sisters Chapter 26 21. The Religion of Radio Days Chapter 27 22. Hlenka Regained: Irony and Ambiguity in the Narrator of Woody Allen's Another Woman Chapter 28 23. Justice and the Withdrawal of God in Woody Allen's Crimes and Misdemeanors Chapter 29 24. Between Time and Eternity: Theological Notes on Shadows and Fog Part 30 Filmography Part 31 Index Part 32 About the Contributors Part 33 About the Editor
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