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The Biopolitical Turn in World Cinema

Explores biopolitical currents in world cinema, paying particular attention to postsocialist and postrevolutionary filmmakers from Iran, Russia, China, and Romania.
The Biopolitical Turn in World Cinema explores how cinematic form and content understand and represent relationships of power between the state and life itself. Cinema, it argues, is both technical apparatus and aesthetic object and as such is imminently biopolitical, both as a medium of governmental control and as a site of resistance. The book analyzes a range of cinematic movements, paying particular attention to postsocialist and postrevolutionary filmmakers from Iran (Asghar Farhadi), Russia (Sergei Loznitsa), China (Xiaoshuai Wang), and Romania (Radu Jude). The book concludes by looking toward filmmakers—from Jordan Peele to Albert Serra—who further illuminate the limits of biopolitical paradigms, offering new ways of understanding contemporary political and ethical challenges posed by neoliberal globalization. While this book will appeal to film studies specialists, it is also a comprehensive introduction to film theory and biopolitical thought that will appeal to nonacademic and student readers with an interest in the subjects.
"Barattoni's The Biopolitical Turn in World Cinema describes with laser-sharp precision the current state of play in both film philosophy and film studies. Its original theoretical framework combines Foucault's 'bio power' and Agamben's 'biopolitics' with recent nonhuman and animistic approaches to substantiate the analysis of films picked from post-socialist and post-revolutionary regions, where political oppression results in harm to and often destruction of the human body and life. A highly recommended read for both scholars and lovers of world cinema." — Lúcia Nagib, author of Realist Cinema as World Cinema: Non-cinema, Intermedial Passages, Total Cinema
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Biopolitical Turn in World Cinema
1. Thinking Through Biopolitics and Film: An Overview
2. "The Governmentalization of Social Life": Asghar Farhadi and Iranian Cinema
3. Russia and the Use and Abuse of Genealogical Authority
4. From Biopolitics to Ecopolitics: The (Un)intended Consequences of Biopower in the Cinema of Wang Xiaoshuai
5. Allegories of Extraction: Radu Jude and the New Romanian Cinema
Conclusion: New Directions in World Cinema: The Animist Turn
Notes
Bibliography
Index