Part II: Genre, Pattern & The Concept of Total Meaning completes the Unified Theory of Narrative by going far beneath the surface to reveal cinematic storytelling’s hidden structures of meaning. No previous book has explored the thematic dimension of screencraft in such depth or detail; using an interdisciplinary approach to explain the psychological, sociological, and cultural constructs which have shaped the feature film into the complex narrative form we know today.
In Part II you will find:
• The properties of myth behind all storytelling
• The purpose and origin of cinematic genres
• The phenomenon of plot patterns and its connection to cultural belief
• The explicit lessons found in protagonist psychology
• The ideological nature of dramatic conflict
• And, most importantly, the connection between these elements and our most basic psychological and sociological needs.
Part II: Genre, Pattern & The Concept of Total Meaning is about far more than screencraft. It is about the intimate relationship between storytelling and humanity itself. Since its beginnings, humanity has used stories to make sense of its world, express its beliefs, and give life a sense of order and meaning. By revealing the cinematic story’s ideological structures, and ultimately unifying them with the physical elements presented in Part I, Genre, Pattern & The Concept of Total Meaning shows how modern cinematic storytelling continues this tradition; resulting in an endless multitude of narratives, each doing their part to serve human society with lessons, arguments, and statements of belief.
Author(s): Schock, Michael Welles
Edition: 1
Publisher: Scriptmonk Industries
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 384
Tags: Fiction Writing