The philosophy of Spike Lee /
| Other Authors: | |
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Lexington, Ky. :
University Press of Kentucky,
[2011]
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| Series: | Philosophy of popular culture.
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- Justice, value, and the nature of evil. The symbolism of blood in Clockers / Douglas McFarland
- The prostitution trap of elite sport in He got game / Jason Holt and Robert Pitter
- Aristotle and MacIntyre on Justice in 25th Hour / Mark T. Conard
- We can't get off the bus: a commentary on Spike Lee and moral motivation / Gabriella Beckles-Raymond
- Monsters and moralism in Summer of Sam / R. Barton Palmer
- Race, sexuality, and community. (Still) fighting the power: public space and the unspeakable privacy of the other in Do the right thing / Elizabeth Hope Finnegan
- Coworking in the kingdom of culture: identity and community in the films of Spike Lee / Charles F. Peterson
- Feminists and "freaks": She's gotta have it and Girl / Karen D. Hoffman
- The dialectic of King and X in Do the right thing / Michael Silberstein
- Fevered desires and interracial intimacies in Jungle fever / Ronald R. Sundstrom
- Bamboozled: philosophy through blackface /
- Dan Flory
- Time, the subject, and transcendence. Transcendence and sublimity in Spike Lee's signature shot / Jerold J. Abrams
- Economies of time in Clockers / Richard Gilmore
- Rethinking the first person: autobiography, authorship, and the contested self in Malcolm X / David LaRocca.