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Visionaries: Thinking Through Female Filmmakers

This series delves into the visionary world of female filmmakers who are reshaping cinema. It explores their innovative approaches, unique perspectives, and crucial contributions to film language and narrative. Readers will discover courageous creators who push boundaries and leave an indelible mark on film history. It's a celebration of creativity, pioneering spirit, and the enduring impact of women on the silver screen.

Marguerite Duras
Kathleen Collins

Recommended Reading Order

  • Kathleen Collins

    • 176 pages
    • 7 hours of reading

    A philosopher-filmmaker, Kathleen Collins decisively redefined the parameters of African American film with Losing Ground (1982). This book uses detailed analyses of Collins's films to contextualise her work in the African American, feminist and world film traditions, and it highlights her contribution to each of these canons.

    Kathleen Collins
  • Marguerite Duras

    • 128 pages
    • 5 hours of reading

    The writer Marguerite Duras was a key figure in post-war French cinema, pioneering innovations such as the disjunction of film and image, and the primacy given to voices, silence and music. Her multisensorial approach opened up new spaces for the female experience to be expressed. Although she worked with some of the best French visual technicians and musicians of her time, critiques have often neglected the visual and sonic aesthetics of her films, and their effects on spectators. Drawing on theories of embodiment and spectatorship, this book analyses the tactility and multisensoriality of Duras' films, and how they relate to her female-centred perspective.

    Marguerite Duras