Performing Brains on Screen

Author:   Fernando Vidal
Publisher:   Amsterdam University Press
ISBN:  

9789462989146


Pages:   258
Publication Date:   21 April 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Performing Brains on Screen


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Overview

"Performing Brains on Screen deals with film enactments and representations of the belief that human beings are essentially their brains, a belief that embodies one of the most influential modern ways of understanding the human. Films have performed brains in two chief ways: by turning physical brains into protagonists, as in the ""brain movies"" of the 1950s, which show terrestrial or extra-terrestrial disembodied brains carrying out their evil intentions; or by giving brains that remain unseen inside someone’s head an explicitly major role, as in brain transplantation films or their successors since the 1980s, in which brain contents are transferred and manipulated by means of information technology. Through an analysis of filmic genres and particular movies, Performing Brains on Screen documents this neglected filmic universe, and demonstrates how the cinema has functioned as a cultural space where a core notion of the contemporary world has been rehearsed and problematized."

Full Product Details

Author:   Fernando Vidal
Publisher:   Amsterdam University Press
Imprint:   Amsterdam University Press
ISBN:  

9789462989146


ISBN 10:   9462989141
Pages:   258
Publication Date:   21 April 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Acknowledgments Note on References and Images 1. Brainhood and the Cinema The ""Deficit Model"" and the Agency of Film Bs to Zs Filmic Brains in the Neurobiological Age 2. Brains in the Pulps Resources Scientifiction, Textual and Visual Advertisement and ""Prophetic Insight"" Before Gernsback Weird Tales Stories Astounding and Amazing 3. Naked Brains and Living Heads Brain Movies Body Parts The Donor Portion Apes Semigrafts Living Heads Some Filmic Allografts Paradox of the Naked Brain 4. Personal Survival Immortality and the Brain Adam and Tithonus Staying the Same, Becoming Someone Else The Man Who Changed His Mind (1936) Change of Mind (1969) The Man With the Transplanted Brain (1971) 5. Frankenstein’s Brains Shelley’s Novel and Frankenstein Films The Final Touch: Frankenstein (1931) The Universal Series The Hammer Series Beyond Universal and Hammer 6. Memories, Lost and Regained A Preference for Retrograde Amnesia Localizing Memory in the Filmic Brain Personal Identity and the Authenticity of Memory Erasing Memories Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) Dark City (1998) 7. ""Imagine, They Are in the Human Mind"" Bibliography Films Index"

Reviews

The Cartesian subject may be dead but our brains still haven't figured that out. In Performing Brains on Screen, Fernando Vidal provides an impressive survey of the brain as protagonist across a pulpy expanse of fiction and cinema, examining how the continuing equation of brain and selfhood informs popular understandings of identity, consciousness, and memory. Essential reading for neuroscientists, cinephiles, and anyone else who has ever pondered the odd yet enduring convention of brains transplanted, escaped, switched, uploaded, and otherwise liberated from the body as spongy receptacle of selfhood. - Jeffrey Sconce, Professor in the Screen Cultures program at Northwestern University and a Guggenheim Fellow for 2020-2021


The Cartesian subject may be dead but our brains still haven't figured that out. In Performing Brains on Screen, Fernando Vidal provides an impressive survey of the brain as protagonist across a pulpy expanse of fiction and cinema, examining how the continuing equation of brain and selfhood informs popular understandings of identity, consciousness, and memory. Essential reading for neuroscientists, cinephiles, and anyone else who has ever pondered the odd yet enduring convention of brains transplanted, escaped, switched,uploaded, and otherwise liberated from the body as spongy receptacle of selfhood. - Jeffrey Sconce is Professor in the Screen Cultures program at Northwestern University and a Guggenheim Fellow for 2020-2021.


Author Information

Fernando Vidal is Research Professor of ICREA (Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies) at the Medical Anthropology Research Center, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona, Spain.

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