• Title/Summary/Keyword: American Independent Cinema

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Underground Cinema and Avant-Garde Art: The Rise of American Independent Cinema

  • Li, Nan;Jung, Heonyong
    • International Journal of Advanced Culture Technology
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.102-107
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    • 2022
  • The emergence of independent cinema in the United States in the 1960s was the earliest sign of postmodernism in the country, which was often referred to as "underground cinema". The works, in a counter-cultural stance, overturned the thought of depth of traditional art cinema, not exploring the meaningful relationship between form and content in terms of artistic technique, but creating an aesthetic that echoed the "Pop Art" of the time by collaging established means of expression with traditional and fashionable ones in a consumerist manner. In this paper, American independent cinema was examined, firstly by analyzing the local and external factors that contributed to its rise. Secondly, two genres of independent cinema core paradigm, "underground cinema" and "pop cinema" were focused on, as a way of demonstrating the attention and influence that independent cinema has gained. Finally, we found that independent cinemas are also seeking for alternative exploration and diverse expressions in the context of the times.

Cinematic Time and Space in Maya Deren's Films: 'Artificial Reality' (마야 데렌의 영화적 시간과 공간: '인위적 리얼리티')

  • Huh, Eunhee
    • Journal of Korea Multimedia Society
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    • v.21 no.10
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    • pp.1211-1220
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    • 2018
  • Maya Deren is well known as the 'mother' of the American avant-garde films by her first short, Meshes of the Afternoon (1943). One of the major contributions of Maya Deren's theoretical body of work to the visibility was the invention of a new vocabulary for independent film-making such as 'film-poems', and 'choreo-cinema'. To create experimental film forms, she chose poetry, dance, architecture and music as a metaphor to describe her images. On the top of these arts, Maya uses camera works and editing system to achieve an 'artificial reality' whose character is miraculous in that living whole, in order to help the audience to experience a protagonist's psychological journey.

A Study of Self-Realization in Cinema Space - Focus on the Symbol of Analytical psychology - (영화공간에서 나타난 자기실현과정에 관한 연구 - 분석심리학의 상징 중심으로 -)

  • Jeong, Hyang-Kug;Hur, Bum-Pall
    • Korean Institute of Interior Design Journal
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    • v.20 no.6
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    • pp.105-115
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    • 2011
  • We are inundated with visual media; countless such media, ranging from Hollywood blockbusters, American drama, Korean films with enormous budgets to independent films, appeal to our sensibility and engage our empathy and insight. The making of mega-hits that attract millions and a drama of viewer ratings of over forty percent lies in how persuasive the sensibility of the narratives are to an audience from a different milieu and personality. It leads to a question: how can empathy of such a varied group of people be won towards the perspective of directors and authors who come from different nationality and ethnicity to themselves? In exploring the issue, I aim to adopt a psychoanalytical view of human psychology, into consciousness and unconsciousness. Freudian psychoanalysis and Jungian analytic psychology in depth psychology underpin my analysis of visual media. It further enables my examination of unconsciousness applied to spatial design, which is elementary in visual media. In sum, this research aims to improve understanding of spatial design in films, a product of creative human consciousness, by interpreting this as an outcome of the unconscious. This is to apply the concept of collective unconscious in Jung's analytical psychology.