Eros in the Mind's Eye: Difference between revisions
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'''''Eros in the Mind's Eye: Sexuality and the Fantastic in Art and Film''''' is a 1986 anthology of criticism, edited by [[Donald Palumbo]]. | '''''Eros in the Mind's Eye: Sexuality and the Fantastic in Art and Film''''' is a 1986 anthology of criticism, edited by [[Donald Palumbo]]. | ||
'''Description:''' "This lively collection offers a wide-ranging exploration of the erotic and the fantastic in painting, illustration, and frilm. It covers Western art of six centuries--from medieval woodcuts to contemporary poster art--and the cinema of six decades--from horror classics of the 1930s to recent slasher films--documenting the surprising variety of guises in which sexuality appears in fantasy art and cinema. Among the subjects treated are occult eroticism in Medieval and Renaissance art; the use of fantasy as a vehicle for depicting erotic subjects in periods of sexual repression; the fascination with unconscious and aberrant sexuality in the visual arts since the publication of Freud's theories; movie monsters and aliens as emblems of the submerged id or libido; and monstrous metamorphosis as a symbol of the changes accompanying puberty." | |||
==Editions== | ==Editions== | ||
Revision as of 11:19, 8 December 2010
Eros in the Mind's Eye: Sexuality and the Fantastic in Art and Film is a 1986 anthology of criticism, edited by Donald Palumbo.
Description: "This lively collection offers a wide-ranging exploration of the erotic and the fantastic in painting, illustration, and frilm. It covers Western art of six centuries--from medieval woodcuts to contemporary poster art--and the cinema of six decades--from horror classics of the 1930s to recent slasher films--documenting the surprising variety of guises in which sexuality appears in fantasy art and cinema. Among the subjects treated are occult eroticism in Medieval and Renaissance art; the use of fantasy as a vehicle for depicting erotic subjects in periods of sexual repression; the fascination with unconscious and aberrant sexuality in the visual arts since the publication of Freud's theories; movie monsters and aliens as emblems of the submerged id or libido; and monstrous metamorphosis as a symbol of the changes accompanying puberty."
Editions
- 1986: Greenwood Press, New York. ISBN 9780313241024. ISBN 0313241023. Contributions to the Study of Science Fiction and Fantasy Series, #21