Mel Gibson was one of the biggest film stars from the end of the
nineties and the early 2000s. His movies were big international successes and
he decided to become a director in 1993 with The Man without a Face, a
low-budget film that already contains all the themes of his future oeuvre as a
director. Obviously, Gibson is a real author, an artist who questions the
ambivalence of the human being, a being who is capable of the best and the
worst. This theme is also representative of his career as a director, because
Gibson enjoyed fame (Braveheart won 5 Oscars, including that for best film in
1996) but also ostracization after The Passion of the Christ (2004). The latter
film created a scandal, the director being accused of anti-Semitism, because of
his portrayal of the Jewish people as the deicide people. In addition, Gibson’s
personal life is also troubled as he himself is accused of being racist, homophobic
and anti-Semist. However, like Christ, he managed to resuscitate in Hollywood
with a war film Hacksaw Ridge (2016), which won 2 Oscars and 6 nominations. A
feat for a director who has always tried to work on different film genres
(drama, adventure film, peplum, war ...).
Now, Mel Gibson is once again an important director in Hollywood and
this book shall demonstrate all the thematic and aesthetic richness of his
work. We are particularly interested in interdisciplinary approaches that can
illuminate the various aspects of the director’s work and visual style. This
volume will undertake to address the entirety of his work. As this volume will
be peer-reviewed and scholarly, chapters are to be written at a high academic
level.
Contributions could include – but are not limited to – the following
topics:
- Religion
- Christic Figure
- The Father Figure
- Mel Gibson’s vision of Film Genre (peplum, war, adventures, drama...)
- Violence
- Influence of Joseph Campbell
- The importance of myth
- Human ambivalence
- Madness
- Morality and transgression
- Representations of masculinity and femininity
- Sound and use of music
- War and rebellion
- The influence of Caravaggio
- Collaboration with Randall Wallace
- Collaboration with James Horner
- The TV series Complete Savages
- The thematic of Jew people
- The individual facing the majority
This anthology will be organized into thematic sections around these
topics and others that emerge from submissions. We are open to works that focus
on other topics as well and authors interested in pursuing other related lines
of inquiry. Feel free to contact the editor with any questions you may have
about the project and please share this announcement with colleagues whose work
aligns with the focus of this volume.
Submit a 300-500 word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution, a
brief CV and complete contact information to David Da Silva
(david.dasilva@univ-paris3.fr) by April 29, 2020. Full chapters of 6,000 words
(minimum) will likely be due in late August after signing a contract with the
publisher (we expect this to be a volume in the ongoing Critical Companion to
Popular Directors series edited by Adam Barkman and Antonio Sanna and published
with Lexington Books at Rowman & Littlefield).
Note: Acceptance of a proposed abstract does not guarantee the
acceptance of the full chapter into the completed volume.
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