Hitchcock as Philosopher of the Erotic

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A01=Richard Gilmore
Alfred Hitchcock
Author_Richard Gilmore
Category=AGA
Category=ATFB
Category=JBCT
Category=QDHR5
Category=QDTN
cinematic hermeneutics
entanglement
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eros
eros and identity
erotic gaze
erotic spaces
erotic suspense
existential eros
existential philosophy
existentialism in cinema
film philosophy
North by Northwest
philosophy of film
philosophy of love
philosophy of sex
philosophy of sexuality
postmodern film theory
reciprocal personality creation in film
Richard Gilmore
the erotic
Vertigo

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032451190
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book reads Alfred Hitchcock as a philosopher of what constitutes the erotic. The author argues that Hitchcock is doing a post-Nietzschean, postmodern kind of philosophy in which he is exploring and creating possibilities of what the erotic can feel like and how the erotic can be expressed.

The erotic is a pervasive phenomenon in Hitchcock’s films. It involves irony, play, and sophistication, and there can be erotic failures as well as erotic successes. The erotic is most complexly explored by Hitchcock in his two masterpieces from the 1950s: Vertigo (1958), a story of the failure of the erotic, and North by Northwest (1959), in which the erotic is consummated in marriage. The author argues that Hitchcock has a philosophical theory about what makes the difference. It is a version of existential philosophy that understands what a person is to be based on what they make of themselves through their choices. The author argues that the erotic for Hitchcock is a process of mutual, reciprocal creation of the personality of the other person. This process is complicated by the fact that as one attempts to create the person one desires, one is simultaneously being created by that other person, and so what one desires is also in a process of being recreated in the mutual reciprocal dance of the erotic entanglement. There is a moral dimension to this because erotic failure is, in a way, a failure of the human, not in the sense of a human essence, but in the sense of realizing human possibilities that can make our lives more satisfying, complete, and full.

Hitchcock as Philosopher of the Erotic will appeal to scholars and advanced students working on philosophy of film, film studies, and philosophy of love and sex.

Richard Gilmore is Professor of Philosophy at Concordia College, Moorhead, MN. He is the author of Emerson as Philosopher: Postmodernism and Beyond (2023), Searching for Wisdom in Movies: From the Book of Job to Sublime Conversations (2016), and Philosophical Health: Wittgenstein’s Method in Philosophical Investigations (1999).

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