by Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
Book / 2000
TitleFilm & philosophy. Special issue on Woody Allen
Item typeBook
Author(s)Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
ImprintPortsmouth, OH Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts., 2000
LanguageEnglish
URLLink to original record
Notes
  • Title from cover.
  • Acknowledgements -- Sander Lee: Editorial introduction -- Vittorio Hosle: Why do we laugh at and with Woody Allen? - - Maurice Yacowar: Text/subtext in Everyone says I love you -- Mary Nichols: Woody Allen's search for virtue for a liberal society: The case of Mighty Aphrodite -- Mark W. Roche: Justice and the withdrawal of God in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Ronald Leblanc: Deconstructing Dostoevsky: God, guilt, and morality in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- William C. Pamerleau: Rethinking Raskolnikov: Exploring contemporary ethical horizons in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Richard Gilmore: Visions of meaning: Seeing and non-seeing in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Joseph Westfall: Listening in/to Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- William J. Krier: 'Blazoned days': Meaning changes in the films of Woody Allen -- Robert Vigliotti: Woody Allen's ring of Gyges and the virtue of despair -- Bruce Russell: The philosophical limits of film.
  • Pacific Film Archive collection; non-circulating. CBPF.
Physical description167 p. ; 25 cm.

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Date text: 
2000
Author: 
Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
Publisher: 
Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
Subject headings: 

Item Type:

Millenium MARC Record: 
LEADER 00000nam 2200265Ka 4500 001 54039979 005 20040116 TAPE OCLC0116: 0320 008 040120s2000 xxu 000 0 eng d 009 Reclvl: f Addate: 040120 Addid: OCL Moddate: 080606 Modid: XRF 035 (PFA-BOOKS)6455 035 GLADN185172671 040 CUY|beng|cCUY 090 PN1998.3.A26|bF54 2000 130 0 Film and philosophy.|pSpecial issue on Woody Allen. 245 10 Film & philosophy.|pSpecial issue on Woody Allen /|cSander Lee, guest editor. 260 Portsmouth, OH :|bSociety for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts.,|c2000. 300 167 p. ;|c25 cm. 500 Title from cover. 505 0 Acknowledgements -- Sander Lee: Editorial introduction -- Vittorio Hosle: Why do we laugh at and with Woody Allen? - - Maurice Yacowar: Text/subtext in Everyone says I love you -- Mary Nichols: Woody Allen's search for virtue for a liberal society: The case of Mighty Aphrodite -- Mark W. Roche: Justice and the withdrawal of God in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Ronald Leblanc: Deconstructing Dostoevsky: God, guilt, and morality in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- William C. Pamerleau: Rethinking Raskolnikov: Exploring contemporary ethical horizons in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Richard Gilmore: Visions of meaning: Seeing and non-seeing in Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- Joseph Westfall: Listening in/to Woody Allen's Crimes and misdemeanors -- William J. Krier: 'Blazoned days': Meaning changes in the films of Woody Allen -- Robert Vigliotti: Woody Allen's ring of Gyges and the virtue of despair -- Bruce Russell: The philosophical limits of film. 506 Pacific Film Archive collection; non-circulating.|5CBPF. 600 10 Allen, Woody,|d1935- 650 0 Motion pictures|xPhilosophy|xPeriodicals. 710 2 Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts. 935 GLADN185172671 957 OCLC xref loaded 20140928 964 PFA PN1998.3.A26F54 2000. |bCAT/A 994 01|bCUY