This book united the inner Star Wars geek and academic, film theory nerd within me.
The essays focus on approaching Star Wars as a cultural product, as opposed to viewing it in terms of its mythic, universal messaging, as most scholarly work on it so far has done.
As such, the critiques expressed in the book vary markedly in both stance and subject. My favourite was probably Carl Silvio’s essay on Star Wars and Global Capitalism.
This book was also released in 2007, so makes no mention of the release of subsequent episodes and spin-offs.
Overall, I really loved this. I’ve read a bit of film criticism and theory for uni and for my own extra-curricular studies, but this is the first time I’ve read a collection of essays on just one movie. It’s a really great format, and it allows me to hone in on one work that I’m already deeply familiar with, and whose images already have a personal resonance for me. The variety of topics touched on is enlightening as well, giving me, the reader, plenty of potential avenues to go down. Perhaps I could look more into the ideas expressed in the capitalist essay, or perhaps the definitions raised in the two feminist essays, or maybe the Walter Benjamin essay on technological reproduction and “aura” that provides the foundation for a reading of the dreaded special editions.
Also decided to write in my book this time. I don’t usually do this, but I left a lot of marginalia in this one. Whilst I wouldn’t do this for fiction, as it disrupts the immersive experience too much, I did get something out of engaging with the text more actively. It slowed my reading a bit more but deepened my experience. Might do it again when reading academic or non-fictional work.