Sport, Film, and the Modern World  Paid

by Neil Archer (Author)
©2024, Textbook, XIV, 236 Pages
Media & Communication

Series: Communication, Sport, and Society, Volume 11

HARDCOVER

eBook


This book rethinks the discussion of sport as a cinematic subject. Arguing for the vitality of the sports film as distinctively ‘modern’ genre, the book looks at its innovative potential to capture twentieth- and twenty-first-century sport in all its complexity.

Written in an accessible style and illustrated throughout, the book integrates work and ideas from film studies with thinking from sports psychology, philosophy, data theory and ecocriticism. In its detailed analyses of a wide-ranging group of films, the book shows how film, from fictional works to biopics to experimental documentaries, can illuminate individual sporting experience, as well as sport’s wider place in modern life.

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. About the author
  5. About the book
  6. This eBook can be cited
  7. Contents
  8. List of Illustrations
  9. Acknowledgments
  10. Introduction: Modernity, Sport, and Film – Starting Line
  11. Chapter 1 From Cars to Chariots and Back Again, via Le Mans: The Modernist Impact of Sport and Film
  12. Chapter 2 Cities and Bodies in Motion: Modernist Trajectories in the Parkour Film
  13. Chapter 3 Winning Ugly: Moneyballing the Sports Film
  14. Chapter 4 Winning Uglier: Ethical Dilemmas in the Sports Biopic
  15. Chapter 5 Subjectivity in the Twenty-First-Century Sports Documentary
  16. Chapter 6 Going Solo: Ecocritical Approaches to the ‘Extreme’ Sports Film
  17. Afterword: Film vs Sport – Endgame
  18. Index
  19. Series Index
Pages:
XIV, 236
Year:
2024
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781636677958 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781636678344 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781636677965 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
New York, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, Oxford, 2024. XIV, 236 pp., 25 b/w ill.

Neil Archer is Senior Lecturer in Film at Keele University (UK). He is the author of eight previous books, including Twenty-First-Century Hollywood: Rebooting the System (2019) and The Social Network: Youth Film 2.0 (2022).

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