The Visage: Unmasked


Book Description

Under the umbrella of FYCGlobal Career Guidance Company, Student Mentors Yashi Shukla and Anjana Anand brought seven students together through a contest and worked with them over weekly sessions to come up with “The Visage: Unmasked”. “The Visage: Unmasked” is a book co-authored by six teenagers. It is based on the ‘Seven Stages of Grief’ with each author going through one particular stage, and all trying to reach the final stage- acceptance. Because the journey is always more beautiful than the destination, this book is about the girls’ journeys towards acceptance. It talks about the everyday struggles of being a teenager, and various other issues that are a part of every teenager’s life. What started as a hobby for the six girls has now found its way inside the pages of a book, a book that holds a piece of their souls and is a product of everything they’ve been through.




Situated Knowing


Book Description

Situated Knowing aims to critically examine performance studies’ ideological and socio-political underpinnings while also challenging the Anglo-centrism of the discipline. This book reworks the concept of situated knowledges put forward over thirty years ago by American biologist and philosopher Donna Haraway in order to challenge the Enlightenment paradigm of objectivity in sciences by emphasising the role of the embodied and partial socio-cultural perspective of the scholar in the production of knowledge. Through carefully selected case studies of contemporary natural, cultural and technological performances, contributors to this volume show that the proposed approach requires new genealogies of traditional concepts, emerges from encounters with contemporary performative arts or contact zones and may potentially go beyond the human in order to include non-human ways of being in the world. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of performance studies, cultural studies, media studies and theatre studies.




Screening the Face


Book Description

Coates presents the face in film as a place where transformations begin, reflecting both the experience of modernity and such influential myths as that of Medusa. This is exemplified by a wide range of European and American films, including Ingmar Bergman's Persona .




Cinesexuality


Book Description

Cinesexuality explores the queerness of cinema spectatorship, arguing that cinema spectatorship represents a unique encounter of desire, pleasure and perversion beyond dialectics of subject/object and image/meaning; an extraordinary 'cinesexual' relationship, that encompasses each event of cinema spectatorship in excess of gender, hetero- or homosexuality, encouraging all spectators to challenge traditional notions of what elicits pleasure and constitutes desiring subjectivity. Through a variety of cinematic examples, including abstract film, extreme films and films which present perverse sexuality and corporeal reconfiguration, Cinesexuality encourages a radical shift to spectatorship as itself inherently queer beyond what is watched and who watches. Film as its own form of philosophy invokes spectatorship thought as an ethics of desire. Original, exciting and theoretically sophisticated – focusing on continental philosophy, particularly Guattari, Deleuze, Blanchot, Foucault, Lyotard, Irigaray and Serres – the book will be of interest to scholars and students of queer, gender and feminist studies, film and aesthetics theory, cultural studies, media and communication, post-structural theory and contemporary philosophical thought.







Insular Iconographies


Book Description

Essays on aspects of iconography as manifested in the material culture of medieval England.




Le grand dictionnaire Hachette-Oxford


Book Description

A book that lists French language words and gives their equivalent in English, and English language words with their equivalent in French.




Caesar Borgia


Book Description







Viewing Positions


Book Description

Traces the history of spectatorship and gaze theory in film studies.