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Fiona Handyside

    Cinema at the shore
    Girls' Hairstories
    • Girls' Hairstories

      Sparkle and Resilience in Contemporary Screen Cultures

      • 238pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Exploring the cultural significance of girls' hairstyles, this book delves into how these styles shape and express the concept of girlhood in modern visual media. It analyzes the intersection of identity, beauty standards, and societal expectations, highlighting the role of hair as a powerful symbol in the lives of young girls. By examining various visual representations, the work reveals how hairstyles contribute to the broader narrative of femininity and self-expression in contemporary culture.

      Girls' Hairstories
    • Cinema at the shore

      The Beach in French Film

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      From Brigitte Bardot in her bikini at the Cannes Film Festival, to François Ozon’s intimate portrayals of grief and loss, some of the most iconic and challenging moments in French cinema are associated with the beach. Cinema at the Shore argues that the Parisian cityscape is not the only significant definition of space in French cinema and instead explores the industrial, aesthetic and thematic relations of French cinema to the beach. Examining a range of films from the 1950s to the present day – including popular comedies by Jacques Tati and Patrice Leconte, the lively and ruminative documentaries of Agnès Varda, the classicism of Eric Rohmer, and the provocations of Catherine Breillat – this book showcases the dynamism and importance of the beach as a site for the reconfiguration of French cinematic identity itself. The beach offers a unique crystallization of our attitudes towards nature, culture, the body, space and time. In its constant mobility, its close, yet distinctive, relationship with nature, and its paradoxical centrality in the French cultural imaginary as a site of relaxation and holidays, the beachscape, re-framed and re-imaged by the camera, offers new ways of conceiving of the spatial politics of French cinema.

      Cinema at the shore