Skip to main content
Skip to "About government"
Language selection
English
Gouvernement du Canada /
Government of Canada
Recherche
Chercher dans le site Web
Recherche
Menu
Menu
principal
Emplois et milieu de travail
Immigration et citoyenneté
Voyage et tourisme
Entreprises et industrie
Prestations
Santé
Impôts
Environnement et ressources naturelles
Sécurité nationale et défense
Culture, histoire et sport
Services de police, justice et urgences
Transport et infrastructure
Canada et le monde
Argent et finances
Science et innovation
You are here:
Canada.ca
Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
Services
Services aux bibliothèques, archives et musées
Thèses Canada
Item – Thèses Canada
Contenu de la page
Item – Thèses Canada
Numéro d'OCLC
896966801
Lien(s) vers le texte intégral
Exemplaire de BAC
Exemplaire de BAC
Auteur
Reed, Matthew.
Titre
A Public Haunted House : the Uncanny Urban Space on Screen
Diplôme
M.A. -- Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema, Concordia University, 2011
Éditeur
[Montréal, Québec] : [Concordia University], [2011]
Description
1 online resource (vii, 122 pages) :illustrations (some color)
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 112-119).
Résumé
This thesis investigates how specific urban built forms have been used to unsettle cinema audiences at certain points in cinematic and architectural history. Drawing upon Freud's theory of the uncanny in combination with extensive architectural criticism and discourse on cinema and its intersection with the city, I argue that uncanny architecture provides a fundamental critical framework for representing, expressing and dramatizing fear towards the metropolis. Divided into three chapters I analyze three different architectural epochs revolving around a historical narrative of the emergence, decay and absence of architectural Modernism. Beginning in Weimar Berlin I examine Walter Ruttmann's exploration of first wave Modernity in Berlin, Symphony of a Great City (1927) and his exploitation of the primal, mystical uncanniness hidden within a city of proposed rationality, functionalism and strict geometry. I then turn to the architecture of British brutalism and explore a shining modernity decayed into neo-gothic ruins, in Andrea Arnold's Red Road (2006) in which a British audience is haunted by the ghost of an earlier social idealism. I then conclude by moving to contemporary Tokyo in Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Pulse (2001) and confront the uncanniness endemic in a city invested so heavily in non-human technology and "non-architecture". Throughout I argue that the metropolis will always find a way to haunt itself. Ideas of transience, death and spatial disorientation will remain fixed foundations for any developed city and that the urban uncanny is a malleable, shifting condition, consistently capitalized on by the cinema.
Autre lien(s)
spectrum.library.concordia.ca
spectrum.library.concordia.ca
spectrum.library.concordia.ca
Sujet
architecture
Date de modification :
2022-09-01