
Post-traumatic Attachments to the Eerily Moving Image
This book explores how traumatic experiences of impingement and neglect – in childhood and adulthood, and at both the family and the state level – may create a desire in us to be parented by certain kinds of screen media that we unconsciously believe are “watching over” us when nothing else seems to be.
Andrew Asibong explores how viewers make psychical use of eerily moving images, observed in film...
This book explores how traumatic experiences of impingement and neglect – in childhood and adulthood, and at both the family and the state level – may create a desire in us to be parented by certain kinds of screen media that we unconsciously believe are “watching over” us when nothing else seems to be.
Andrew Asibong explores how viewers make psychical use of eerily moving images, observed in film...