Técnicas Cinematográficas e Actos Mentais: “The Photoplay” de Hugo Münsterberg

Authors

Keywords:

Aesthetics, Analogy, Mind, Objectivation, Perception

Abstract

This paper analyses Münsterberg’s The Photoplay in the light of the relation between mind and film, aiming to clarify the parallel between mental acts and cinematographic techniques such as it is drawn by the author. It criticises the interpretation of this relation as an “analogy,” stressing that the term used by Münsterberg to characterize this relation is not “analogy”, but “objectivation”. In this context, it is argued that in determining what the “objectivation” of mental processes in cinematographic techniques in The Photoplay means, the principal aim of the book should be remembered: the defense of the aesthetic character of film. In conclusion, Münsterberg’s goal is not, as suggested by Noël Carroll, to elucidate the function of cinematographic techniques through an analogy with mental processes, but to show that the distinctive aesthetics of film relies on the production of the perception of a world structured by mental acts.

Author Biography

Teresa Pedro, IFILNOVA, Portugal

Teresa Pedro was awarded a PhD in Philosophy by the Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV). She is now a post-doctoral researcher at the Institute for Philosophy of Language of the New University of Lisbon and at the Center for Knowledge Research of the Berlin Institute of Technology. Her research focuses on German idealism, G. W. F. Hegel, F. W. J. Schelling, and at the moment on the cinematographic perception of space and time.

Published

2011-12-19

How to Cite

Pedro, T. (2011). Técnicas Cinematográficas e Actos Mentais: “The Photoplay” de Hugo Münsterberg. Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image, (2), 165–183. Retrieved from https://cinema.fcsh.unl.pt/index.php/revista/article/view/165

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Section

Articles