About this item
Highlights
- Ageing, Dementia and Time in Film: Temporal Performances offers the first sustained analysis of films about ageing and dementia through a temporal framework.
- Author(s): Maohui Deng
- 192 Pages
- Performing Arts, Film
Description
About the Book
Offers the first sustained analysis of films about ageing and dementia through a temporal framework
Book Synopsis
Ageing, Dementia and Time in Film: Temporal Performances offers the first sustained analysis of films about ageing and dementia through a temporal framework. Analysing the aesthetics of films like A Moment to Remember (2004), Memories of Tomorrow (2006) and Happy End (2017), Deng provides new insights into our understanding of how ageing is temporally produced, presented, received and interrogated in and through cinema.
Bringing together Gilles Deleuze's philosophy of difference and ideas on time, and building on scholars like Alia Al-Saji, Henri Bergson, Bliss Cua Lim, and David Martin-Jones, the book develops a conceptual framework of relational change - of temporal performances - and suggests that everyone and everything experiences time differently.
Review Quotes
This important book offers a stimulating reading of films that examine the perspective of the person living with dementia. Deng's original approach is founded on well-informed theoretical ideas such as temporal performances and hesitation in order to show how these films tackle crucial issues such as difference, relationality, and care.
--Raquel Medina, Aston UniversityWhat does it mean to experience time differently? To approach this question, Deng takes a refreshing Deleuzian turn to make dexterous links between the messy temporalities of both dementia and cinema. Embracing hesitation as an ethical approach, Deng offers a delightfully clear, theoretically deft, movingly personal take on cinematic aging that is well worth the read.
--Sally Chivers, Trent University