A pivotal text in the study of the senses in visual culture. (Another recent addition to a growing sub-field being Jennifer Barker's "The Tactile Eye".) One of the great things about Marks' book - for me anyways - is that she provides a really handy introduction to the idea of haptic visuality, a key point of departure for much contemporary thinking about embodied modes of reception; trying to plough through Riegl, who first broached the haptic/optic dialectic, is not a very productive exercise in this respect. Marks is certainly very lucid, and rigorously thorough, in explicating the critical foundations of her approach: haptics, the Benjamin-ian aura, the time-image of Deleuze, the fetish etc. However - and I would like to hear from others who disagree here - Marks' exploration of the embodied gaze with respect only to what she terms experimental, "intercultural" cinema, results in very thin visual analysis. In other words, her limited selection of the type of object she studies seems to restrict the applicability of the concepts she utilizes, and her formal readings, in a technical sense, strikes one as being predicated on variations of the close-up. Surely there are other means of considering how the non-ocular senses can be evoked in the visual register (say, via the actual, physical experience of cinema-going) ?