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  1. Reading Cavell.Alice Crary, Sanford Shieh, Russell B. Goodman & William Rothman - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 65 (2):229-233.
     
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  2.  6
    Must We Kill the Thing We Love?: Emersonian Perfectionism and the Films of Alfred Hitchcock.William Rothman - 2014 - Columbia University Press.
    William Rothman argues that the driving force of Hitchcock's work was his struggle to reconcile the dark vision of his favorite Oscar Wilde quote, "Each man kills the thing he loves," with the quintessentially American philosophy, articulated in Emerson's writings, that gave classical Hollywood movies of the New Deal era their extraordinary combination of popularity and artistic seriousness. A Hitchcock thriller could be a comedy of remarriage or a melodrama of an unknown woman, both Emersonian genres, except for the murderous (...)
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  3. Cavell on film, television, and opera.William Rothman - 2003 - In Richard Eldridge (ed.), Stanley Cavell. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 206--238.
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    Keynote Article: On Stanley Cavell's Band Wagon.William Rothman - 2014 - Film-Philosophy 18 (1):9-34.
    This is a revised version of a keynote presentation delivered by Professor Rothman at the Conference on Stanley Cavell’s Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow , University of Paris I: Panthéon-Sorbonne, September 2012.
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  5. Silence and stasis.William Rothman - 2011 - In Alex Clayton & Andrew Klevan (eds.), The Language and Style of Film Criticism. Routledge.
     
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  6. Stanley Cavell.William Rothman - 2008 - In Paisley Livingston & Carl Plantinga (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy and Film. Routledge.
     
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    Tuitions and intuitions: essays at the intersection of film criticism and philosophy.William Rothman - 2019 - Albany: SUNY Press.
    Introduction: how John the Baptist kept his head, or my life in film philosophy -- A philosophical perspective. Why not realize your world? -- Silence and stasis -- Film and modernity -- André Bazin as Cavellian realist -- On Stanley Cavell's band wagon -- What becomes of the camera in the world on film? -- Studies in criticism. "I never thought I would sink so low as to become an actor": John Barrymore in Twentieth century -- James Stewart in Vertigo (...)
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    The holiday in his eye: Stanley Cavell's vision of film and philosophy.William Rothman - 2021 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Presents an original, insightful, and compelling vision of the trajectory of Cavell's oeuvre, one that takes his kinship with Emerson as inextricably bound up with his ever-deepening thinking about movies.
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