Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film

This article aims to examine some aspects of the cinematic work of Stanley Kubrick from the embodied and interdisciplinary point-of-view of Conceptual Metaphor Theory. Central to this theory is the idea that abstract concepts such as emotions, relationships and mental functions are metaphorically un...

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Main Author: Maarten Coëgnarts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2017-12-01
Series:Cinergie
Online Access:https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/7342
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spelling doaj-7aa35c52a99e4e7f858b449c986329582020-11-25T00:36:42ZengUniversity of BolognaCinergie2280-94812017-12-01612537110.6092/issn.2280-9481/73426564Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in FilmMaarten Coëgnarts0University of AntwerpThis article aims to examine some aspects of the cinematic work of Stanley Kubrick from the embodied and interdisciplinary point-of-view of Conceptual Metaphor Theory. Central to this theory is the idea that abstract concepts such as emotions, relationships and mental functions are metaphorically understood in terms of concrete concepts of human bodily experiences such as movement and spatial boundedness. Given that Kubrick’s work is characterised as highly conceptual, it is therefore plausible to assume that the meaning entailments of his films arise from the same mappings of embodied source domains. This paper sets out to illustrate this hypothesis by offering a dense analysis of various concise scenes taken from his oeuvre. It is precisely through Kubrick’s mastery of the devices of filmmaking (e.g. framing, camera movement, editing, etc.) that, as this paper demonstrates, his films exhibit a formal precision rooted in the human sensory-motor system, which enables them to reach a level of conceptual sophistication.https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/7342
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maarten Coëgnarts
spellingShingle Maarten Coëgnarts
Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
Cinergie
author_facet Maarten Coëgnarts
author_sort Maarten Coëgnarts
title Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
title_short Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
title_full Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
title_fullStr Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
title_full_unstemmed Stanley Kubrick and the Art of Embodied Meaning-Making in Film
title_sort stanley kubrick and the art of embodied meaning-making in film
publisher University of Bologna
series Cinergie
issn 2280-9481
publishDate 2017-12-01
description This article aims to examine some aspects of the cinematic work of Stanley Kubrick from the embodied and interdisciplinary point-of-view of Conceptual Metaphor Theory. Central to this theory is the idea that abstract concepts such as emotions, relationships and mental functions are metaphorically understood in terms of concrete concepts of human bodily experiences such as movement and spatial boundedness. Given that Kubrick’s work is characterised as highly conceptual, it is therefore plausible to assume that the meaning entailments of his films arise from the same mappings of embodied source domains. This paper sets out to illustrate this hypothesis by offering a dense analysis of various concise scenes taken from his oeuvre. It is precisely through Kubrick’s mastery of the devices of filmmaking (e.g. framing, camera movement, editing, etc.) that, as this paper demonstrates, his films exhibit a formal precision rooted in the human sensory-motor system, which enables them to reach a level of conceptual sophistication.
url https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/7342
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