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Stillmoving
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Description
This two-volume work explores a static long take, termed a still Einstellung, as well as coexistent still and moving imagery by Lumière, Welles and the MPEG compression codec, to contemplate the kind of image it generates.
Jon Inge Faldalen's volumes are a theoretical exploration of the concept of Einstellung. The author keeps the original German term, capitalizing on the ambiguity inherent in this type of image phenomenon; in this case, the long take, or at least a continuous unbroken take, effected by an immobile camera whose captured content could potentially contain perceptible movements produced by entities within the composition framed. The author embraces neologisms in order to capture specific aesthetic-technical phenomena more accurately than has hitherto been possible.
Stillmoving I is a film theoretical exploration of the concept of Einstellung. The author asks whether this image is a still image, or a moving image, or both, or neither, or, finally, what Faldalen terms stillmoving. Underlying these deliberations is the question of how cinema represents or mediates stillness. It unfolds over three chapters that examine the concept of still Einstellung in relation to slow cinema scholarship throughout the last two decades, in relation to approaches referred to as stillmoving scholarship, and in relation to reflections and shadows.
Stillmoving II continues the work of the first volume, exploring the concept of Einstellung through a small set of specific case studies, including Louis Lumière's Quai de l'Archevêché (Lumière operator, 1896), André Bazin's analysis of the kitchen scene in The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles, 1942), and James Benning's Stemple Pass (2012), as well as what the author calls “digital imagenesis,” which concerns the MPEG compression codec.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Still Einstellung
1. Still Still at Stake: From Slow Cinemas to a Still Cinema Still Einstellung in Slow Cinema Scholarship (2000-2020)-and What is Still at Stake?
2. A Both/Neither Beneath Betweens? From Still Moving to Stillmoving (Part I): Still Einstellung in Still Moving Scholarship (2000-2020)-and What is Still at Stake?
3. Still Einstellung: Stillmoving Imagenesis (Discourse, 2014): Still Einstellung in Reflections and Shadows-A First Analytical and Conceptual Contribution
Index
Stillmoving II
PART I: A Both/Neither Beneath Betweens?: From Still Moving to Stillmoving
(Part 2) Still Einstellung in Still Moving Scholarship (2011-2020) – and What is Still at Stake?
PART II: The First Einstellung of Film Was Still
1. Louis Lumière and Film Frames that “Coincide Exactly” and are “Rigorously Identical”
2. Case Study I: Quai de l'Archevêché (Lumière operator, 1896)
3. Early Contemplative Film
PART III: As If Swaddling Stillness: What Cinema is as Well
4. Case Study II: The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles, 1942)
5. André Bazin and “The Immobility of the Sequence Shot” (1)
6. André Bazin and “The Immobility of the Sequence Shot” (2)
7. The Magnificent Ambersons Beyond Bazin
Conclusion: Stillmoving-A Different Kind of Image
Case study IV: The MPEG Compression Codec
Index
Product details
| Published | Jun 12 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Pack - Printer Assembled |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN | 9798765129012 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 46 bw illus |
| Dimensions | Not specified |
| Series | Thinking Media |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |









