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Towards a Neo-Blochian Theory of Complexity, Hope and Cinematic Utopia

Version 2 2016-01-26, 12:06
Version 1 2014-04-19, 09:13
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posted on 2016-01-26, 12:06 authored by Craig HammondCraig Hammond

The thesis sketches-out three main and general philosophical, analytical and utopian-strategic areas: Initially, the project begins with a cumulative overview (i.e. drawing upon a collection of authors and publications) of the Marxist philosopher of hope and utopia Ernst Bloch, and, the Blochian philosophical framework. I focus upon, and, analyse several specific philosophical areas within the Blochian framework, notably, those of the chaos of the trace, and Bloch’s unifying (unfolding, trans-historical) category of Hope and Utopia. In order to navigate this difficult philosophical terrain, the thesis proposes several conceptual and neologistic “inventions” – associated with chaos and complexity – so as to invoke a potentially useful (neo)-Blochian philosophical vocabulary. The project then applies Bloch and the Blochian utopian framework to the specific area of popular film/cinema (and, within this, the portrayal of “beautiful monsters”). The neo-Blochian concepts are then applied to utopian cinematic metaphors, images and themes concerning “beautiful monsters”; in exploration of this, I embark upon several contra-punctive Blochian (and, neo-Blochian) analyses of a selection of popular films

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