[مقالة]
عنوان : |
In and Along the Mississippi : The Motif of Music in Joel and Ethan Coen's O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train |
نوع الوثيقة : |
نص مطبوع |
مؤلفين : |
Gonzalez, Éric, مؤلف |
تاريخ النشر : |
2003 |
مقالة في الصفحة: |
P99-P110 |
اللغة : |
إنكليزي (eng) |
الكلمة المفتاح : |
J.E. Coen, J.Jarmusch, Folk music, Popular music, Cinema ,Mississippi, Memphis |
خلاصة : |
In O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Mystery Train the Coen brothers and Jim Jarmusch choose the state of Mississippi and the city of Memphis, Tennessee as the settings of their heroes' peregrinations. Music permeates Joel Coen's and Jim Jarmusch's cinematic spaces, so much that it influences their narrative and stylistic perspectives and structures their works. The aim of this paper is to examine how the Coen brothers' and Jarmusch's choice of the musical field as a territory for their reconstructions of the South enables them to collate distinct artistic domains and genres in their representations of "border incidents" between stories, legends and history. |
in Revue française d'étude américaines > 98 (Trimestrielle) . - P99-P110
[مقالة] In and Along the Mississippi : The Motif of Music in Joel and Ethan Coen's O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train [نص مطبوع ] / Gonzalez, Éric, مؤلف . - 2003 . - P99-P110. اللغة : إنكليزي ( eng) in Revue française d'étude américaines > 98 (Trimestrielle) . - P99-P110
الكلمة المفتاح : |
J.E. Coen, J.Jarmusch, Folk music, Popular music, Cinema ,Mississippi, Memphis |
خلاصة : |
In O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Mystery Train the Coen brothers and Jim Jarmusch choose the state of Mississippi and the city of Memphis, Tennessee as the settings of their heroes' peregrinations. Music permeates Joel Coen's and Jim Jarmusch's cinematic spaces, so much that it influences their narrative and stylistic perspectives and structures their works. The aim of this paper is to examine how the Coen brothers' and Jarmusch's choice of the musical field as a territory for their reconstructions of the South enables them to collate distinct artistic domains and genres in their representations of "border incidents" between stories, legends and history. |
|