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- Moral Spectatorship (Technologies of Voice and Affect in Postwar Representations of the Child)
Moral Spectatorship (Technologies of Voice and Affect in Postwar Representations of the Child)
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Product Details
Overview
For more than two decades, film theory has been dominated by a model of identification tacitly based on the idea of feeling what the other feels or of imagining oneself to be the other. Building on the theories of affect and identification developed by André Green, Melanie Klein, Donald W. Winnicott, and Silvan Tomkins, Cartwright develops a model of spectatorship that takes into account and provides a way of critically analyzing the dynamics of a different kind of identification, one that is empathetic and highly intersubjective.








