Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present

New York City is perhaps the most iconic manifestation of urbanity in the 20th century. While the Manhattan skyline dominates the New York imaginary American cinema has also consistently qualified and complicated this architecturally-determined perspective by re-imagining the city in ecological term...

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Main Authors: Brady Fletcher, Cortland Rankin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam University Press 2013-01-01
Series:NECSUS : European journal of media studies
Online Access:https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/painting-the-town-green-from-urban-teleology-to-urban-ecology-in-new-york-cinema-1960-present/
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spelling doaj-3558ec3c975446b78819cd174a504bf62020-11-25T01:19:29ZengAmsterdam University PressNECSUS : European journal of media studies2213-02172013-01-012111314410.5117/NECSUS2013.1.FLETPainting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-presentBrady FletcherCortland RankinNew York City is perhaps the most iconic manifestation of urbanity in the 20th century. While the Manhattan skyline dominates the New York imaginary American cinema has also consistently qualified and complicated this architecturally-determined perspective by re-imagining the city in ecological terms. Over the past half-century many films set and largely produced in New York have deployed the imagery and metaphoricity of ecology to articulate urbanity, although in two distinct ways. We begin by tracing what we call an ‘urban teleology’ in which filmmakers re-envision the city in terms of the environmental conceits of wilderness and garden but from ideologically normative perspectives that privilege the managed urban sphere as the epitome of sociality. In contrast to this teleological model are cinematic experimentations that ‘re-inhabit’ urban space by foregrounding New York’s ‘urban ecology’. As such the second part of our article is concerned with how certain modes of cinema can re-orient or ‘queer’ notions of urbanity through the critical lens of ecology, thus cinematically ‘greening’ the city.https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/painting-the-town-green-from-urban-teleology-to-urban-ecology-in-new-york-cinema-1960-present/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brady Fletcher
Cortland Rankin
spellingShingle Brady Fletcher
Cortland Rankin
Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
NECSUS : European journal of media studies
author_facet Brady Fletcher
Cortland Rankin
author_sort Brady Fletcher
title Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
title_short Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
title_full Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
title_fullStr Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
title_full_unstemmed Painting the town green – From urban teleology to urban ecology in New York cinema, 1960-present
title_sort painting the town green – from urban teleology to urban ecology in new york cinema, 1960-present
publisher Amsterdam University Press
series NECSUS : European journal of media studies
issn 2213-0217
publishDate 2013-01-01
description New York City is perhaps the most iconic manifestation of urbanity in the 20th century. While the Manhattan skyline dominates the New York imaginary American cinema has also consistently qualified and complicated this architecturally-determined perspective by re-imagining the city in ecological terms. Over the past half-century many films set and largely produced in New York have deployed the imagery and metaphoricity of ecology to articulate urbanity, although in two distinct ways. We begin by tracing what we call an ‘urban teleology’ in which filmmakers re-envision the city in terms of the environmental conceits of wilderness and garden but from ideologically normative perspectives that privilege the managed urban sphere as the epitome of sociality. In contrast to this teleological model are cinematic experimentations that ‘re-inhabit’ urban space by foregrounding New York’s ‘urban ecology’. As such the second part of our article is concerned with how certain modes of cinema can re-orient or ‘queer’ notions of urbanity through the critical lens of ecology, thus cinematically ‘greening’ the city.
url https://www.necsus-ejms.org/test/painting-the-town-green-from-urban-teleology-to-urban-ecology-in-new-york-cinema-1960-present/
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