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The films of Alfred Hitchcock deal heavily with psychological and philosophical themes, and one needn't look very far into the canon to find them. In Psycho, for example, the personality metamorphosis in Marion Crane that leads her into grand larceny is a pale double of the murderous oedipal divide in Norman Bates. In The Birds, overbearing natural mutations turn what might have been a "creature feature" into a film about fear of the unknowable.This book looks at 12 Hitchcock films and the positions they put forth on three problem areas of epistemology: deception, knowledge of mind, and problematic knowledge of the external world. These philosophical concepts are explained and woven into the author's thorough and thought-provoking discussion of each film. Descartes and Wittengenstein star; Plato, Locke, Hume, Kant and Kierkegaard also make appearances in this new "philosopher's cut" of the master's works.
Robert J. Yanal is emeritus professor of philosophy at Wayne State University, Detroit. He lives in Tucson, Arizona.
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Preface 1 Hitchcock as Philosopher I. DECEPTION2. The Problem of Deception 3. Rebecca’s Deceivers 4. The End of Suspicion 5. Vertigo 6. North by Northwest II. MIND7. On Knowing a Mind 8. Shadow of a Doubt 9. Strangers on a Train 10. Psycho 11. Marnie, Spellbound III. KNOWLEDGE12. Problematic Knowledge 13. Rear Window 14. The Man Who Know Too Much 15. The Birds Chapter Notes Bibliography Index