Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image : Something to Watch Over Me
Book Details
AI Summary
Delivery Location
Delivery fee: Select location
This book explores how traumatic experiences of impingement and neglect – in childhood and adulthood, and at both the family and the state level – may create a desire in us to be parented by certain kinds of screen media that we unconsciously believe are “watching over” us when nothing else seems to be.
Andrew Asibong explores how viewers make psychical use of eerily moving images, observed in film and television and later taken into an already traumatised mind, in order to facilitate some form of reparation for a stolen experience of caregiving. It explores the possibility of a media-based “working through” of both the general traumas of early environmental failure and the particular traumas of viewers racialised as Black, eventually asking how politicised film groups in the age of Black Lives Matter might heal from a troubled past and prepare for an uncertain future through the spontaneous discussion – in the here and now – of enlivening images of potentially deadly vulnerability.
Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image: Something to Watch Over Me will be of great interest to academics and students of film, media and television studies, trauma studies and psychoanalysis, culture, race and ethnicity.
Get Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image by at the best price and quality guaranteed only at Werezi Africa's largest book ecommerce store. The book was published by Taylor & Francis Ltd and it has pages.
Discover books you might love based on this title.
More in This Genre
A Clinician's Guide to Foundational Story Psychotherapy
Ksh 25,200.00
Putting the Psychoanalytic Frame to Work
Ksh 6,450.00
What's News
Ksh 7,200.00
Political Messaging in Music and Entertainment Spaces across the Globe. Volume 1.
Ksh 12,650.00
The Klein-Winnicott Dialectic
Ksh 26,100.00
Media and Social Space in Russia and Sweden
Ksh 18,900.00