For more than 30 years, David Cronenberg has produced films, mostly
outside the Studio system, which continue to disturb, surprise and
challenge audiences. He has also been repeatedly drawn to literary
fiction for inspiration, adapting works by figures like William
Burroughs, J.G. Ballard and Patrick McGrath.
This book is only the second single-authored study on Cronenberg and as
well as containing the first detailed analysis of eXistenZ (1999)
Spider (2003) and A History of Violence (2005), it is the first to
explore how understanding certain written texts, from both underground
and mainstream fiction, can help us understand how Cronenberg`s films
work.
Cronenberg's literary aesthetic is discussed via the process of
adaptation, not just in relation to overt source material but also
writers such as Vladimir Nabokov, Angela Carter, Margaret Atwood, Brett
Easton Ellis and Clive Barker. The book examines how Cronenberg’s
literary influences function, particularly in terms of narrative
structures and suggests the nature of their importance for Cronenberg
in his conception of the director as auteur. It also considers the
current state of adaptation studies and the need to move beyond
conventional psychological frameworks in film analysis more broadly and
Cronenberg's work in particular.
Author: Mark Browning
ISBN 9781841501734
Paperback 208 pages 230x174mm
Published October 2007
Price £19.95