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  1. Left-over Spaces: The Cinema of the Dardenne Brothers.Benoît Dillet & Tara Puri - 2013 - Film-Philosophy 17 (1):367-382.
    The object of this study is the presence and the operation of space in the films of the Dardenne brothers. In this paper, we will examine three films - Rosetta , The Child and The Silence of Lorna - and present the argument that they depict an original account of the contemporary European city as a totality (in this case an eastern Belgian steel town). The construction of the characters, their relationships, and the moral implications of their actions are usually (...)
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  • Mortal Ethics: Reading Levinas with the Dardenne Brothers.Sarah Cooper - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (2):56-87.
    Prior to the productive encounters that can be staged between Emmanuel Levinas’sthought and cinema at the level of reception, Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne introducehis philosophy to their filmmaking at its moment of inception.1Luc Dardenne’s diary Audos de nos images documents their filmmaking from 1991 to 2005, and isinterspersed with brief but erudite references to Levinas’s work. While Levinasianthinking is one among many cited influences in this text, which also features quotationsfrom the writings of novelists, poets, and other philosophers, along with (...)
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  • Joseph Mai (2010) Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne.R. D. Crano - 2011 - Film-Philosophy 15 (2):119-125.
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  • Introduction: The Occluded Relation: Levinas and Cinema.Sarah Cooper - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (2):66–87.
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  • Every Wholly Other: Postsecular Pluralism in Isabel Rocamora's Faith.Mark Cauchi - 2024 - Film-Philosophy 28 (2):269-293.
    In this article, I undertake a close reading of Isabel Rocamora's 2015 film installation Faith, which shows, on three separate screens, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim men simultaneously performing their morning prayers in three distinct, historically significant sites in the Judean desert. Setting the cinematic and installation properties of the work into dialogue with a number of philosophers (Levinas, Derrida, Cavell), film theorists (Bazin, Deleuze, Chion), and art theorists (Fried, Elkins), I argue that it adopts a postsecular approach to religious pluralism. (...)
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  • The Dardenne Brothers and the Invisible Ethical Drama: Faith without Faith.John Caruana - 2016 - Religions 7 (5):43.
    The cinema of the Dardenne brothers represents a new kind of cinema, one that challenges a number of our conventional ways of thinking about the distinction between religion and secularism, belief and unbelief. Their films explore the intricacies of spiritual and ethical transformations as they are experienced within embodied, material life. These features of their cinema will be examined primarily through the lens of Emmanuel Levinas’s philosophy of the imbrication of the drama of existence and the ethical intrigue of self (...)
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  • Venture in/between ethics, education and literary media: making cases for dialogic communities of ethical enquiry.Kenny Colm - 2017 - Dissertation, Dublin City University
    The thesis contends that education and literary studies can make a valuable contribution to ethics and ethical development of persons, their relations with others and with the world. It promotes an approach to ethics education through dialogic enquiry based on theories and practices associated with comparative literature and philosophical enquiry. These involve students sharing experiences and meanings as they participate in interpretive communities and communities of philosophical enquiry. There are two main components to the research: ethically focused studies of literary (...)
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  • Psychology Degree Zero? The Representation of Action in the Films of the Dardenne Brothers.Robert Pippin - 2015 - Critical Inquiry 41 (4):757-785.
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  • The Third City: The Post Secular Space of the Dardenne Brothers' Seraing.Catherine Wheatley - 2019 - Film-Philosophy 23 (3):264-281.
    Set principally in or around Seraing, an industrial region in decline just outside of Liège, in Belgium, the films of Jean-Luc and Pierre Dardenne marry geographical and historical-social realism with a series of ethical inquiries into such topics as immigration, unemployment, black market trading and petty crime. To date, critical commentary on the films has tended mainly to read the work of the Dardennes along two lines. The dominant approach uses the work of Emmanuel Levinas as a philosophical touchpoint in (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Ethics of the Face in Art: On the Margins of Levinas’s Theory of Ethical Signification in Art.Akos Krassoy - 2016 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 53 (1):42-73.
    In ‘Reality and Its Shadow’, Levinas dismisses knowledge as a whole from art. This has deep implications for the ethical. The aesthetic event has nothing to do with the ethical event – art does not seem to hold a place for ethical knowledge. This situation is problematic with respect to the conflicting phenomenological evidence as well as with respect to Levinas himself, who occasionally relies on works of art in his ethical phenomenological analyses. My article aims to fill in the (...)
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  • The Crisis before the Crisis: Reading Films by Laurent Cantet and Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne Through the Lens of Debt.Martin O’Shaughnessy - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):82-95.
    The discussion that follows establishes a three-way conversation between two films, Laurent Cantet’s L’Emploi du temps (Time Out [2001]) and Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne’s Le Silence de Lorna (Lorna’s Silence [2008]) and one work of theory, Maurizio Lazzarato’s La Fabrique de l’homme endetté: essai sur la condition néo-libérale (The Making of Indebted Man: Essay on the Neoliberal Condition [2011]). The subject of the conversation will be neo-liberal governance and the role of debt within it. Part of Lazzarato’s argument regards the (...)
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  • Sympathy for the Other: Female Solidarity and Postcolonial Subjectivity in Francophone Cinema.Kathleen Scott & Stefanie Van de Peer - 2016 - Film-Philosophy 20 (1):168-194.
    In this article we explore how female sympathy and solidarity can be forged between transnational subjects and spectators. In particular, we place cinematic depictions of minority female suffering in the contexts of current feminist and postcolonial praxes. The aim is to demonstrate the ways in which world cinema can produce a transnational feminist solidarity through forms and narratives that reflect the experiences of women as gendered postcolonial subjects. Amongst the female and feminist theorists drawn upon, central to our understanding of (...)
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