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Full Description
Charlie Kaufman's Möbius Strip: Film, Philosophy and Literary Theory presents Kaufman's diagnosis of alienation and corruption in the modern age as a fundamentally spiritual malady.
Each chapter builds on a theological or metaphysical idea, drawing from thinkers as diverse as Kierkegaard, Kafka, Wittgenstein, and David Foster Wallace, along with spiritual insights from the Talmud, Tibetan Buddhism, and Christian mysticism. This isn't to sell the notion that Charlie Kaufman is a covert religious thinker of any particular stripe. Instead, the book reveals how, behind the surreal whimsy, playfulness, and absurdity of his fictional universes, Kaufman's films collectively present an accurate anatomy of contemporary despair or broken heartedness.
Kaufman's critique engages in what this book terms a "meta-modernity"—a dual mode that oscillates from postmodern irony to sincere engagement with human suffering and angst. The Kaufmanesque text is openly vulnerable and guarded, direct and oblique, playful and lamenting. This book offers an essential guide to understanding Kaufman's unique cinematic vision and its profound engagement with the spiritual crises of our time.
Contents
1: The Doorway
2: Little Dolls—Two Versions of Being John Malkovich
3: More Little Dolls: Anomalisa and Consumer Totalitarianism
4: From Kafkaesque to Kaufmanesque
5: Hide and Seek in Eden's Shadow: Adaptation and Sunshine
6: Synecdoche and the Bardo
7: Comedy Hell: Frank or Francis and Antkind
8: Exit Strategies



