Who can forget Dorothy’s quest for the great and powerful Oz as she tried to return to her beloved Kansas? She thought she needed a wizard’s magic, only to discover that home—and the power to get there—had been with her all along. This engaging and provocative book proposes that Hollywood has created an imaginary cinematic geography filled with people and places we recognize and to which we are irresistibly drawn. Each viewing of a film stirs, in a very real and charismatic way, feelings of home, and the comfort of returning to films like familiar haunts is at the core of our nostalgic desire. Leading us on a journey through American film, Elisabeth Bronfen examines the different ways home is constructed in the development of cinematic narrative. Each chapter includes a close reading of such classic films as Fleming’s
The Wizard of Oz, Sirk’s
Imitation of Life, Burton’s
Batman Returns, Hitchcock’s
Rebecca, Ford’s
The Searchers, and Sayles’s
Lone Star.
สารบัญ
Prologue–Out of the Library
Introduction: Not Master in His Own House
1. Uncanny Appropriations
2. Home–There’s No Place Like It
3. Seduction of Departing
4. Hybrid Home
5. The Enigma of Homecoming
6. Sustaining Dislocation
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Elisabeth Bronfen is professor of English at the University of Zurich. She is the author, most recently, of
The Knotted Subject: Hysteria and Its Discontents and the coeditor of
Feminist Consequences: Theory for a New Century (Columbia).