Simultaneous worlds : global science fiction cinema / [editors] Jennifer Feeley and Sarah Ann Wells.

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Feeley, Jennifer, 1976- (Editor), Wells, Sarah Ann, 1979- (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2015.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Jennifer Feeley and Sarah Ann Wells
  • Intermediality and new media economies. Scan lines: how cyborgs feel / Thomas Lamarre
  • What is estranged in science fiction animation? / Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr
  • Famous for fifteen minutes: permutations of science fiction short film / Pawe Frelik
  • Forms of journey and archive: remaking science fiction in contemporary artist-filmmakers' projects / Jihoon Kim
  • Traveling science fiction: translation, adaptation, and interpretation. Media heterotopias and science fiction: transnational workflows and transgalactic spaces in digitally composited ecosystems / Hye Jean Chung
  • F.P. 1 and the language of a global science fiction cinema / J.P. Telotte
  • Enthiran, the robot: Sujatha, science fiction, and tamil cinema / Swarnavel Eswaran Pillai
  • Spatial and temporal alternative modernities in the global south. Polytemporality in Argentine science fiction film: a critique of the homogenous time of historicism and modernity / Joanna Page
  • Virtual immigrants: transfigured bodies and transnational spaces in science fiction cinema / Everett Hamner
  • Walking dead in avana: Juan of the dead and the zombie film genre / Emily A. Maguire
  • Techno-capitalism and techno-desires: the gendered affect of post-cyborgs. Who does the feeling when there's no body there?: critical feminism meets cyborg affect in Oshii Mamoru's Innocence / Sharalyn Orbaugh
  • The invention of romance: Park Chan-Wook's I'm a cyborg, but that's okay / Steve Choe
  • A disenchanted fantastic: the pathos of objects in Hirokazu Kore-Eda's Air doll / Michelle Cho
  • National, international, intergalactic: socialist and post-socialist science fiction cinema. Alien commodities in Soviet science fiction cinema: Aelita, Solaris, and Kin-dza-dza! / Jillian Porter
  • Parodies of realism at the margins of science fiction: Jang Jun-Hwan's Save the green planet and Sin Sang-ok's Pulgasari / Travis workman
  • Media and messages: blurred visions of nation and science in Death ray on a coral island / Nathaniel Isaacson.