1st Edition

Multimodal Film Analysis How Films Mean

By John Bateman, Karl-Heinrich Schmidt Copyright 2012
338 Pages
by Routledge

346 Pages
by Routledge

338 Pages
by Routledge

This book presents a new basis for the empirical analysis of film. Starting from an established body of work in film theory, the authors show how a close incorporation of the current state of the art in multimodal theory—including accounts of the syntagmatic and paradigmatic axes of organisation, discourse semantics and advanced ‘layout structure’—builds a methodology by which concrete details of... Read more
1. Introduction: Analyzing Film  2. Paradigmatic and Syntagmatic Organisation  3. The Paradigmatic Organisation of Film  4. The Syntagmatic Organisation of Film  5. Analysis: Combining Syntagmatic and Paradigmatic Accounts in the Empirical Analysis of Film  6. The Syntagmatic Organisation of Film (II): Descriptive Syntagma  7. The Paradigmatic Organisation of Film (II): Relations within the shot  8. Filmic Analysis Within and Around the Shot  9. Conclusion

Biography

John Bateman is professor of Applied Linguistics in the English and Linguistics Departments of the University of Bremen, specializing in functional, computational and multimodal linguistics.

Karl-Heinrich Schmidt is professor of Electronic Media at the Bergische University of Wuppertal.

"By developing a framework for multimodal film analysis, Bateman and Schmidt bridge the gap between accounts that analyse film shot by shot and those accounts who primarily focus on larger units such as scenes. One of the fundamental advances of their socio-semiotic model is that it includes details on lower levels of abstraction as well as highly abstract concepts like filmic genre… As far as I am aware, the concept they develop is unmatched in contemporary film theory and shows how fundamental semiotic concepts still are."—Thomas Metten in Multimodal Communication