Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions

Cover of Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions by Patrick McGee
Year: 2022
Language: en
Pages: 186
ISBN-13: 9781666741728
Dimensions:
Height: 9 inches
Length: 6 inches
Weight: 0.93 pounds
Width: 0.5 inches
Editorial overview Touché

Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions by Patrick McGee, published by Resource Publications in 2022, is a philosophical poem presented in the form of a waking dream. This edition, comprising 186 pages, explores the intersection of cinema and cultural revolution through a narrative that begins in a World War I field. The narrator encounters a mysterious figure who reveals that the cinematic images experienced are projections of the mind, emphasizing the power of empathy within visual culture.

Readers will find a rich tapestry of dialogues and encounters with historical and cultural figures, including Trotsky, modernist writers, and philosophers like Wittgenstein. The text examines cinema as a catalyst for nonviolent revolution, contrasting it with the violent upheavals of the twentieth century. Through cinematic visions inspired by directors such as Eisenstein and Chaplin, the poem traverses various landscapes, from Paris to Memphis, highlighting how these images channel revolutionary desires and advocate for nonviolence.


Official synopsis Publisher

Comedy is a philosophical poem in the form of waking dream, inspired by Dante and William Blake. In book two, Cinematic Revolutions, the narrator, having passed through a cinema screen at the end of book one, arrives in the middle of a World War I field of dying men. An indescribable human figure appears who warns that these cinematic images are not real but projections of the cinematic mind with its power of empathy. Assuming different shapes and identities, this generic being becomes the narrator’s guide. Through a series of dialogues and encounters, cinema and the visual culture it generates are identified with a cultural revolution–the nonviolent revolution–that surpasses the violent revolutions of the twentieth century. This view is articulated through encounters with Russian revolutionary Trotsky, twelve modernist writers and the philosopher Wittgenstein, Hitchcock, three dictators (Hitler, Stalin, Mao), a cinematic Jesus Christ, Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin. Interspersed among these encounters are cinematic visions from directors like Eisenstein, Chaplin, and others. From Paris to Memphis, passing through Pasolini’s black and white desert in Gospel according to Saint Matthew, descending into the dark underworld of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, rising into a Hollywood heaven of the forties, and standing on top of the Empire State Building with King Kong, cinematic images channel revolutionary desires and the necessity of nonviolence.

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This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions” by Patrick McGee. Synopsis preview: Comedy is a philosophical poem in the form of waking dream, inspired by Dante and William Blake. In book two, Cinematic Revolutions, the narrator, having passed through a cinema screen at the end of book one, arrives in…
Who is the author of “Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions”?
“Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions” is credited to Patrick McGee.
When was “Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions” published?
Publisher: Resource Publications. Year: 2022.
What is the ISBN for “Comedy, Book Two Cinematic Revolutions”?
ISBN-13: 9781666741728.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 186.

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