Circulating within The Postmodern Cinematic Image

Subject is not scheduled Not scheduled

Code Completion Credits Range Language Instruction Semester
311CIRP exam 3 4 hours (45 min) of instruction per week, 33 to 48 hours of self-study English summer

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The subject provides FAMU International

Contents

The aim of this course is to awaken for the active spectator, in terms of aesthetics, cultural capital, and politics, new utopian ways of being,dreaming, interpreting, looking, and thinking as so many forms of “labor” and of “movement”. Combining these will promote an ecology of dialectical questioning and thinking about new, utopian post-capitalist forms of beauty, equality, and freedom for the twenty-first century. These movement and labor forms are dialectically subject within the space of the cinematic frame and institution to both regressive-capitalist and progressive-emancipatory-post-capitalist forms, in relation to the world system, of affective, cognitive and monetary circulation. The seminar thus draws on, and explores egalitarian and novel non-hegemonic ways of engaging gestures, ideas, images, and scenes in films from a range of postmodernist/postwar global films and world-auteurs: Chantal Akerman (Belgium), Michelangelo Antonioni (Italy), Rainer Werner Fassbinder (Germany), Terrence Malick (USA), Alain Resnais (France), Andrei Tarkovsky (USSR), Agnès Varda (France), and Orson Welles (USA). Cinema as the art of forms of movement thus will be evaluated anew. Attention will be given to those cinematic moments and scenes that teach and that train us in new non-dominatory and emancipated viewing strategies of movement and circulation as so many utopian forms of thinking, looking, and individual/collective being. In so doing, we consider arts and forms of movement and circulation as not only subject to capitalist commodification, but also as modes of active engagement, interpretation, and thinking that take place precisely in a shared space for post-capitalist common content, creation, and thought in post-capitalist and emancipated utopian forms of circulation. The role of cinematic silence and of the unconscious in film culture will also be given critical coverage.

Critical and theoretical literature engaged will include film aesthetics, criticism, and philosophy from Theodor W. Adorno (Germany), Giorgio Agamben (Italy), Nico Baumbach (USA), André Bazin (France), Jonathan Beller (USA), Walter Benjamin (Germany), Leo Bersani-Ulysse Dutoit (USA), Jan Campbell (UK), David A. Cook (USA), Gilles Deleuze (France), Mark Fisher (UK), Janet Harbord (UK), Georges Didi-Huberman (France), Owen Hulatt (USA), Fredric Jameson (USA), Niklas Luhmann (Germany), Ivone Margulies (USA), Todd McGowan (USA), Edgar Morin (France), Hannah Patterson (USA), Jacques Rancière (France), Josh Robinson (USA), Erik S. Roraback (USA/Czechia), Nicolás Salazar Sutil (UK), Marion Schmid (France), Steven Shaviro (USA), Bernard Stiegler, (France), Robert T. Tally Jr. (USA), François Truffaut (France), and Slavoj Žižek (Slovenia/UK). Stephen Greenblatt’s (USA) Cultural Mobility: A Manifesto, inter alia, will also be engaged. All films are either in English or have English inter-titles or sub-titles. Clips and special features will also be shown. The course is conducted in English and consists of three clock hour long sessions (i.e., four academic hours) to allow sufficient time for the screenings, for the student presentations, and for seminar lecture/discussion. Strategically, we shall engage our target pictures in an unorthodox counter chronological way in order to undercut overly facile teleological ways of thinking and of reasoning; it will also provide us with a different perspective on the development of the cultural system of film.

Learning outcomes

By the end of the course students will:

Prerequisites and other requirements

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Literature

Agamben, Giorgio: Profanations, trans. Jeff Fort (Zone, 2007).

_ . Infancy and History: On the Destruction of Experience, trans. Liz Heron (Verso, 2007).

Baumbach, Nico: Cinema/Politics/Philosophy (Columbia, 2019).

Beller, Jonathan. The Cinematic Mode of Production: Attention Economy and the Society of the Spectacle (Dartmouth/New England, 2006).

Benjamin, Walter: selected texts from the series of volumes with Harvard Univ. Press to be announced.

Bersani, Leo and Ulysse Dutoit: Arts of Impoverishment: Beckett, Rothko, Resnais (Harvard, 1993).

_ . Forms of Being: Cinema, Aesthetics, Subjectivity (BFI, 2004).

Bird, Robert: Andrei Rublev. (BFI, 2004).

Campbell, Jan. Film & Cinema Spectatorship (Polity, 2005).

Casetti, Francesco: Eye of the Century: Film, Experience, Modernity, trans. Erin Larkin with Jennifer Pranolo (Columbia, 2008).

Conrad, Peter: The Mysteries of Cinema: Movies and Imagination (Thames & Hudson, 2021).

Cook, David A.: A History of Narrative Film (Norton, 2004).

Cruz, Cynthia: The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class (Repeater, 2021).

Deleuze, Gilles: Cinema 1: The Movement-Image, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam

(Minnesota, 1986).

_ . Cinema 2: The Time-Image, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Robert Galeta (Minnesota, 1989).

Didi-Huberman, Georges: The Eye of History: When Images Take Positions, trans. Shane B. Lillis. (RIC, 2018)/MIT, 2018).

Docherty, Thomas: Literature and Capital (Bloomsbury, 2018).

Durham, Scott and Dilip Gaonkar, With an afterword by Jacques Rancière: Distributions of the Sensible: Rancière, between Aesthetics and Politics (Northwestern, 2019).

Fisher, Mark: The Weird And The Eerie (Repeater, 2016).

Heylin, Clinton. Despite the System: Orson Welles Versus the Hollywood Studios (Canongate, 2005).

Jameson, Fredric: Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions (Verso, 2005).

_ . Raymond Chandler: The Detections of Totality (Verso, 2016).

_ . The Geopolitical Aesthetic: Cinema and Space in the World System (Indiana, 1995).

Lambert, Gregg: “The Brain is the Screen: An Interview with Gilles Deleuze” in Flaxman, Gregory, ed., The

Brain is the Screen: Deleuze and the Philosophy of Cinema (Minnesota, 2000).

Le Fanu, Mark: “Stalker” in The Cinema of Andrei Tarkovsky (BFI, 1987) pp. 92–107.

Luhmann, Niklas: The Reality of the Mass Media, trans. Kathleen Cross (Stanford, 2000).

McGowan, Todd: The Real Gaze: Film Theory after Lacan (SUNY, 2007).

Margulies, Ivone: Nothing Happens: Chantal Akerman’s Hyperrealist Everyday (Duke, 1996).

Morin, Edgar: The Cinema, or The Imaginary Man, trans. Lorraine Morimer (Minnesota, 2005).

_ . The Stars, trans. Richard Howard, foreword Lorraine Mortimer (Minnesota, 2005).

Morrison, James and Thomas Schur. The Films of Terrence Malick. (Praeger, 2003).

Nancy, Jean-Luc: The Creation of the World; or, Globalization, trans. with an intro. François Raffoul and

David Pettigew (Albany: SUNY P, 2007).

Naremore, James: The Magic World of Orson Welles (Oxford, 1978 reprinted at Dallas: Southern Methodist, 1989).

Patterson, Hannah: “Two Characters in Search of a Direction: Motivation and the Construction of Identity in Badlands” in The Cinema of Terrence Malick: Poetic Visions of America (Wallflower, 2003) pp. 24–36.

Rancière, Jacques: Film Fables, trans. Emiliano Battista (Berg, 2006).

_ . The Future of the Image, trans. Gregory Elliott (Verso, 2007).

Richards, Rashna Wadia and David T. Johnson: For the Love of Cinema: Teaching our Passion In and Outside of the Classroom (Indiana, 2017).

Roraback, Erik S.: a select band of essays adduced below (some published and / or presented at conferences) from a work that is being prepared for publication, Forms of Cinematic Capital: Circulation, Movement, and Thought.

Salazar Sutil, Nicolás: Motion and Representation: The Language of Human Movement (MIT, 2015).

Shaviro, Steven: The Cinematic Body, Theory Out of Bounds, Volume 2 (Minnesota, 1993).

Stiegler, Bernard: Automatic Society, Volume 1: The Future of Work, trans. Daniel Ross (Polity, 2016).

_ . Technics and Time, 3: Cinematic Time and the Question of Malaise , trans. Stephen Barker (Stanford, 2011).

_ . The Age of Disruption: Technology and Madness in Computational Capitalism, followed by A

Conversation about Christianity with Alain Jugnon, Jean-Luc Nancy and Bernard Stiegler, trans. Daniel Ross (Polity, 2019).

Tally, Robert T. Jr.: Spatiality (Routledge, 2016).

_ . Utopia in the Age of Globalization: Space, Representation, and the World-System (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).

Thomsen, Christian Braad: “The Double Man”, “Bavaria and Hollywood” and “Querelle” in Fassbinder: The

Life and Work of a Provocative Genius, trans. Martin Chalmers (Faber and Faber, 1997) pp. 1–44, 101–10 and 302–11.

Truffaut, François: “Foreword” to André Bazin’s Orson Welles: A Critical View (Acrobat, 1978), pp. 1–27.

Žižek, Slavoj, ed.: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Lacan But Were Afraid to Ask Hitchcock (Verso, 2010).

Evaluation methods and criteria

Attendance - no more than two absences out of the thirteen total weekly sessions

Student work is evaluated based on one oral presentation on a film and on the required text(s), mid-term essay (1000–1500 words), and a Final essay (2000–2500 words).

The course grade will be calculated as follows:

Note

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Further information

No schedule has been prepared for this course

The subject is a part of the following study plans