Dissertation, Kadir has University (
2019)
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Abstract
A phenomenological look on film editing through Merleau-Ponty’s ideas opens up a new
way of seeing what editing is and how it affects the spectator. In the classical sense,
editing is looked at technically where certain aspects of its use in the film’s language are
interpreted and analyzed to understand why and how something is done. In this thesis, the
aim is to not dwell on understanding the why and the how. The aim is to view film editing
from a different perspective that might lead to another type of thinking outside the
limitations of empirical and intellectualist approaches. While the classical approach is
able to satisfy most of what a spectator would need to understand, it falls short on what
the spectator feels and experiences. In order to try to grasp how Merleau-Ponty’s
phenomenological approach could be adapted to film editing. First we have to start from
the beginning to see how editing came to be and what ideas, approaches and techniques
it brought with it. As all the approaches have their own uses; we have to consider them
as such and lay out what could be with Merleau-Ponty’s way and see how all the
approaches compare in the end. Of course, this does not mean erasing all of film history
and disregarding the classical way; it means that we can look at films from a perspective
that the classical approach may not be able to see.