ABSTRACT

In the 1950s, a group of critics writing for Cahiers du Cinéma launched one of the most successful and influential trends in the history of film criticism: auteur theory. Though these days it is frequently usually viewed as limited and a bit old-fashioned, a closer inspection of the hundreds of little-read articles by these critics reveals that the movement rested upon a much more layered and intriguing aesthetics of cinema. This book is a first step toward a serious reassessment of the mostly unspoken theoretical and aesthetic premises underlying auteur theory, built around a reconstruction of Eric Rohmer's early but decisive leadership of the group, whereby he laid down the foundations for the eventual emergence of their full-fledged auteurism.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

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chapter 1|44 pages

A Novelistic Art of Space

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chapter 2|24 pages

Alexandre Astruc: An Early but Decisive Influence

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chapter 3|44 pages

Under and On the Volcano: Rohmer's Conversion

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chapter 4|32 pages

The Art of Nature

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chapter 5|70 pages

Ethics at the Heart of Aesthetics

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chapter |14 pages

Conclusion

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