Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Introduction
"All voodoo is at night." So concludcs Pepe, Hunter's companion in his
endeavor to save a missing aviator who has fallen victim to the Djukas, a
tribc of savages living in the depths of Dutch Guiana's jungle. The Djukas
are less fan1ous for thcir successful slave rcbellion than for the horrific
ritual practices that were thus preservcd from their African ancestry, which
involvc, among other things, human sacrifice. A newsrccl journalist,
Huntcr is not without resources to savc the dying Ayer, as he watchcs
through his camera's lcns, pcrchcd amid thc foliagc of a distant tree. The
victim is fussed over by mcn wcaring large white feathers while others,
wearing loincloths, dance on burning cmbers. "Wait a minute;' says
Hunter, "they go for magic don't thcy?" "Yes," replies Pepe, "everything in
voodoo is magic~' Hunter's strong jaw rela..xes into a victorious smile, he
beams triumphantly and says, "We're going to give them a little magic of
our own!"
Come nightfall, the human sacrificc to fire is interrupted by tl1e clang of
a fire alarm, blaring sirens and giant fire trucks zooming across the night
sky. Thc savage Djukas are held in trance. Locomotive horns blast thcir
way roward the stunncd and silent mcn; the thrcat posed by a close-up of
tl1e tracks' rock bed, that they too might be underneath tl1e train's wheels,
is relieved by a dynan1ite explosion of a glacier in slow motion. Bulls that
bcllow and pound the carth secm to stampede tl1e awestruck spcctators
but pass thcm by, so that they look bchind them to see where the bul.ls
have gotten to. When a tank smashes just befare careening out at them
from the screen, thcy turn to their leader, who faces the screen boldly, only
ro see a di ver reeling backward out of the water to tl1e sound of a gentle
waltz; tl1e diver is suspended in air atop tl1e diving board, and they all
bend their heads and torsos way low, complcting the anticipated action of
falling back clown with their own bodies. A cannon bends fonvard, its
barrcl as large as the screen, and points head on ar them. They turn
backward only to see their magical autl1ority, who, more armoyed than
scarcd, lcads them ro re-addrcss the screen with gestures of protest. A
man's voice in pidgin Spanish threatens to burn clown their village if iliey
Savage Theory
don't behave, and a forest fire breaks out. Once they acquiesce, no less
than the vast waterfalls of Niagara are callcd u pon to qucnch the forest
fire, and from the smoke and glare of a handy fiare, Hunter emerges to pit
"his magic" against Djuk.a voodoo.
Thus an MGM star vehicle dclivcrs two minutes of "pure photogenie. " 1
The danger of the scene forced Hunter (Ciar k Gablc) to deploy every cinematic form of cxccss: the selection, magnification, reversa), and changes
in speed of images as well as sounds. Normally, thcse appear in "fits and
starts;' wrote Jean Epstein in 1928, who then opined that he had "never
seen an en tire minute of pure photogenie." But in this scene from Too Hot to
Handle ( 1938 ), as in the pivotal cream-separator sequencc in Eisenstein's
The Old and the Ne~v ( 1929), there is too much at stake to keep any cinematic tricks up the sleeve. And, like The Old and the Nw as wcll as countless lesser cxamples of cinema's awesomcncss, such magic is at its most
efficacious when shown toa primitive audience, that is, an audicnce that is
markedly perccived to be na! veto the wondcrs of modern technology. 2
The Hollywood banality that films are magic, or "our magic;' as Hunter
put it, stands here as a serious theoretical proposition. The repeated instances of primitive encounter with the cinema only make visual a similar,
albeit more sobcr dependence on the primitivc ro account for the power
of cinema in early film theorctical texts. Early theorists' dcpcndcnce on
primitive belicfs in animism, the sacred, ritual sacrifice, idol worship, and
sympathetic and homeopathic magic to interpret the cinema's power for a
modern audiencc suggest that technology did not lay the irrational ro
rest for good. On the contra!')', the "metal brain"3 promptcd a fascination
with the very primitive against which ir is customarily shown in such
sharp relief.
Contemporary film theory accounts for film's power by grafting the
experience of cinema omo the rich terrain of the unconscious in psychoanalytic film theOl')', or limits its powcr by claiming that spectatorship takes
place in a statc of conscious cognition and is merely a process of reading
meanings through cause and ctfect. 4 The ditference betwcen cognitive and
cultural critical rcadings of films is mercly one of refinement and ras te, for
cultural theorctical critiques too claim to explain films, but use instead
social and historical contexts from within and without thc film ro show us
what it rcally means. 5 The formcr approach ignores the public, social
aspect of film spcctatorship and thc lattcr two neglect its intimacy. And
Imroduaion
none of these methods accounts for the magic of those two minutes of
purc cinema. That is, no matter how much attcntion such film analyses
pay to film form, they are intercsted in uncovering meaning- whether it
is latent or manifest, psychological or intellectual, historical or social. The
magic of cinema, its ability to touch you with no hands, date you, shock
you, though limited, as Epstein put it, to fits and starts, is nonetheless a
defining feature of the medium. To address this magical feature of cinema,
1 suggcst yet another look back at early film theory and its primitivist
impulse in particular.
The Djukas' reaction to the white man's magic could easily be uscd to
illustrate what Tom Gwming rcfcrs to as cincma's "primal scene;' which
has erroneously been constructed as a myth of origin for the cinema. 6 For
the na'ive audience characterized by "traditional accounts" of early cinema,
"the absolutc novelry of the moving imagc reduced them ro a state usually
attributed to savages in their primal cncounter with the advanced teclmology of Westcrn colonialists, howling and fleeing in impotcnt terror befare
the power of the machne." In rcality, argues Gunning, early audiences did
not take the image befare them as real, but were "astonished;' sensually
entertaincd by the visual thrills of the cinema. As GurJJ1ing begins ro
suggest, this primitive construction belies the fears that plague the modern rather than the prin1itive crcature. The waning of experience and thc
ascent of rcprcscntation rendered the cinema a si te for sorc wounds : "The
audience's reaction was the antipode ro the primitive one: ir was an cncountcr with modernity. From the start, the terror of that image uncovered a lack, and promised only a phantom embrace."7 This too is enactcd
vicariously through Djuka eycs near the close of this cpisode in the film.
"He's no God;' one Djuka remarks to another, "he's only a white man!'
Despite critical and anthropological etforts to dispcl the myth of a primitivc audience outdone by visual trickery, images of shocking first contact
with thc cinema that take thc film image as real persist in film theory as
well as in cinema itsclf. Reading Christian Metz on disavowal and fetishism suggests that whether or not spcctators really were credulous at Grand
Caf in 1895 is almost irrelevant. The moment of crcdulity is continually
"evoked by the incredulous spcctators who ha ve come later" precisely because, like all bclicfs in a credulous "long ago;' thcy "irrigare the w1belicf
of today."8 Everything in thc cinema happens as if somcone would bclieve
it, says Metz, yet any spcctator will tell you that he or she "doesn't bclieve
Savage Theory
Introduction
fines tl1e nature of tl1e rclationship achieved in the cinema, whose intimacy
is the grounds for much of its meorerical attention.
Boris Eikhenbaum ( 1886-1959) remarked on the paradox that des pite
"all its 'mass' characrerisrics:' we do nor, apart from entering me tl1eater,
"feel oursclves to be members of a mass ar all" and describes me situation
instead as "intimare." 10 The anonymity of tl1e cinema, I contend, along
wim its "mass characreristics;' combine wim irs solitude in darkness ro
creare a kind of public intimacy, 11 which may be more clearly apparent if
undersrood in ritual terms.
To begin ro align magical ritual with the cinema requires some familiari~' with rhe practicalities of tl1e former. We all know what it means to go
to me cinema, how you choose a film, stand on line, tl1at you're meant to
be guiet, how we feel oursclves addressed by a film, and the particular
rclish with which one reads and ralks about films. Although you know tl1at
me film has been seen by countless strangers in various places, you feel the
viewing is yours alone. In mis sense iris intimare and privare. But cinema
plays ro rhe full range of"inner speech," whi.ch includes socialunderstandings, myths, histories, nostalgias, as well as primal scenes. 12
Ritual cures work in tl1e same kind of public intimare way. Unlike, say,
psychoanalytic healing, there is no mumbo-jumbo abour one's innermost
feclings, no bond with the healer. You show up, pay money or otfer a gift
of some kind, and partake in the ritual, often as part of a group of people
you may or may not know. You hear about healers and rituals that work
for various ailments, and you go and take what's otfered. If you tl1ink ir
works, you srick around or return; if you don't, you search further. Like
cinema, me mode of address from the healer is ro everyone and to no one.
There are specific maladies that can be cured by specific means, but your
personal sutfering plays no parr in the cure from the curer's point of view.
The audience in a magical ritual is made up of di serete people wim varying
concerns. As you lie mere still in a hammock or sir on a stool, two worlds
surface that seduce and distraer by turns. Hallucinogenic visions of color
and movement take you away from tl1at dark room; me shaman's songs
and stories and other people's shouts and laughter bring you back. Continually shifting between absorption and attraction, privare mental meandering and public ritual, your vision will be yours alone, but me collection of inner speeches will intersect around tl1e rin1al's stories, songs,
and images. 13
Savage Thwry
Introduction
aftershocks from the vast changes of daily life that are attributed to the rise
of tcchnology, the reification of labor, or thc Great War is ro revisit a
particular conjunction of the modern and the primitive. Inured ro thosc
changes that produced such profound effects, theoretical attention ro a
moment of radical encountcr botl1 in film theOlJ' and film spectatorship is
mclancholic work. lt is impossiblc ro work back and witness the moment
of loss, a loss that is after all not really within our own hisrorical expericncc, but a loss no less significant as it featurcs so prominently in our
intellecmal hcritage, at thc VC!J' least. To continue tl1is work is to hope that
such attempts reawaken a time when the cinema was new, wondrous, and
horrific- not for nostalgia 's sake, but to disarm the process by which
what is second naturc appears as natural. Looking back at Eisenstein's,
Lindsay's, Balzs's, Epstein's, Kracauer's, Bcnjamin's, and Bazin's encountcrs with the cinema produces, in short, an estrangcment effect on our
understanding of what cinema is toda y.
The most striking and most consistent concern of carly film theory was
thc way modern language was seen as an impoverished expressive form
whose arbitrariness and imprecision could be overcome by the moving
picture. The space between thc word and thc thing is not arbitrary but
magical. From Benjamin to Brakhage, this is the magical realm tl1at cinema inhabits. Condensing m ueh of Critical Thcory, Brakhage wrote, "The
original word was a trick, and so were all the rules of the game that
followed in its wake." 18 This he says not so much to demean the word but
to revere tl1e trick and, by extension, suggest that it is magic that nourishes
thc artist's shadow garden. Thosc who confine themsclves ro thought and
the word, he says, "know it [ the world] without experiencing it, screw it
lovelessly, find 'trick' or 'effect' dcrogatory terminology, too elose for comfort, are uttcrly unable ro comprehend 'magic.'"
Chapter 2 takes the problem of language as thc first symptom of the
modern condition. Using Eisenstein as my exemplar, l discuss the way in
which a primitivistically rearticulated theOlJ' of language translated inro
not only his film theory but also his film practice. For Eisenstein, as wcU as
for Benjamin, Epstein, and Balzs, the space between the word and its
refcrent was a magical one. "Language is animistic:' said Epstein, going so
far as to say that it is thc naming of a thing witl1 a word that enlivens it.
Benjamin took anin1ism one step further, sceing language as a mechanism
by which things talk to other things, and in so doing described all Jan-
Savage Theory
guage, even that between us poor humans, as magical. Language communicates through a material community that is "immediate and infinite, and
like every communication, it is magical"; its symbol, for human commmcation, "is sound." 111 For Balzs, language was impoverishcd by thc loss of
bodily gesture, which was once its full articulation. Finally, Eisenstein
theorized a complex system of associations at work in language whose
chain of association had beco edited from its primitive richness so that
it is now only a shortcut. Cinema, for Eisenstein, could reactivare the
sensuous, primitive chains of meanings now lost. Chapter 2 gives an
account of what was hidden by the language of words and how Eisenstein
instead used the primitively charged language of cinema to reanmate that
lost lucidity.
In chapter 3, I explore the analogous relationship of cinema spectatorship to the spectacle and the primitive's contacr with teclmology. Both
Vachcl Lindsay and Bla Balzs theorize the cinema in terms of primitive
encounter. This foregrounds the issue of modern-primitive encounter and
begins to suggest that cinema, in its adolescencc ( 191 o- 1925), provided a
mirror of mankind in primitive form. Balzs's and Lindsay's encounters
with cinema re-creare first contact both in thcir examplcs of spectatorship
as weU as in the kind of prelinguistic, bodily form of expression they take
cinema to be. In their unique occlusion of the camera's otherwise startling
mimetic capacity, their theories perform first comact. Continuing the
theme that film represents a form of conract otherwise unavailable, chapter 4 traces Balzs's understanding of spectatorship and his physiognomic
divination of faces and things.
In one of Lindsa)r's enthusiastic reviews of cinema, he remarks, "Mankind in his childhood has always wanted his furniture to do such things
[ to move on their own accord] ."20 This "yearning for personality in furniture" ( 33) is a thcme throughout early film theory. Balzs finds that in
cinema things are as expressive as faces. Siegfricd Kracauer sees the surface
attraction of cinema's mass ornamentas a thing, but a thing that resonares
with people's thinglike expericnces, and is therefore attractivc; it draws
the spectator toward it. lt is a very lively thing. Walter Benjamin's preoccupation with the attractive pull of the conm1odity fetish, articula red in his
work on Baudelairc, led him to try to use its power rather than try to
defeat it.
Inspired by these theorists' often enthusiastic remarks about the liveli-
Introductm
ness of thc object in the cinema, l pursue the reasons why we might be
thought to ha ve a "yearning for personality in furniture." This, it seems ro
me, is, or at lcast can be, the source of magic in modern life. Chapter 5
defines the status of the image as an object in itself. An analysis of Kenncth
Anger's Scorpio Rising dcmonstrates the way a film image becomes a fetish.
It then pursues the nature of the object whose meaning is not entircly
contained by its function as a sign ora symbol, but whose function les in
its very objectness. Chaptcr 6 defines thc status of the camera and the
theoretical condition of its image. This involves looking again at Andr
Bazin and Jean-Louis Comolli, not for thcir well-known differences but
for the similar ways they define cinematic space. Chapter 7 defines the
fatigued condition of the spcctator. As things become more powerful,
work more mechanical, and daily life more a series of disrupting noises
than assimilablc cxperiences, the person- so Epstein, Benjamn, and Kracauer believed- was fatigued, distracted, exhausted.
The fatigued, distracted, exhausted state of the modern subject affected
his or her perception. He or she could not see things in perspective. At the
same time, the assaults on the senscs increased, as Simmcl argued in "Thc
Metropolis and Mental Life;' such that one creares a dullcd shicld against
them in daily life. 21 For Epstein cinema could take advantage of this fatigued state to bypass conscious cognition and provoke an unmediated
effect on the spectator. for Kracauer, there was more of a sociological
shape to the identity between the spectacle of cinema and the distracted
spectator himself or hcrsclf. Thc identity between experience and reprcsentation was a step roward change if it led ro the spectator's realization
of this identity. Like Epstein, Benjamn was drawn by cincma's tactile
apperception in a world in which in everyday life experience had "fallen
in value."22
If representation has indeed consumcd experiencc to an extent far beyond that which Benjan1in saw in his lifctimc, the pressure on the cinema
to do the work of bodily felt and contingent experience is so much the
grcater. Perhaps no film bctter depicts the affectless fallen modcrn condition than Robert Bresson's l>A'lfent ( 198 3). In this film, thc fetish character of the cinematic object overpowers rhe fatigued subject, botl1 within
the story of the film and in the formal devices Bresson dcploys to frame
objects and people. Technology does not demystify the machinations of
modcrnity but instead becomes a ncw form of magic. Ideally, the magic
Introduction
Savage Theory
10
11
TheModems
cHAPTER 1
The Moderns
Thc prchistoric impulse to thc past - this, too, at once a consequence and a
condition of technology - is no longcr hiddcn.- Waltcr Benjamin,
"'N' [ Theorctics of Knowledgc, Theory of Progress J"
Early film theory devcloped on thc heels of modcrnity's most fulsome
transformations of everyday life. An ethnography of modernity would
include, for example, the shocks ro the body and fclt reconfigurations of
time and space produced by such modern icons as the train; 1 changes in
home living as produced by central gas and electricit:y that broke up its
internal communal spaces and destroyed the home as an independent
2
unit; and, most important, changes in the nature oflabor that tailored the
human body ro fit a mechanical rhythm and speed. 3 Whether the reason
for these changes is then attributed ro the politics and culture that gave
way to the machine, to the machine itsclf, or not found at all, would
depend on what kind of anthropologist you were.
Nonetheless, modernity's literan1re tells us that the senses had been
radica JI y disturbed, if not reconfigured. Gone for good were the days-long
journeys of Gabriel Oak, whose feet felt the earth's contours in each step,
whose calendar was the stars and whose dock, the sun. Gone too was a
time when labor was couched in the succor of conversation, when rclationships and stories, no less than grindstone and blade, shaped the wool
sheared from lambs-as it had in Thomas Hardy's ( 1840-1928) Wessex
of 1874. 4
A different figure altogcther is cut sorne t:wenty years la ter by Tess D'Urberville, plodding along to evcr more distant and bleak villages in search of
work, only to find it in increasingly rough and monotonous forms. Her
final humiliation comes when she faces " thc red tyrant ... the threshing
5
machine." The machine forces its pace u pon the workers: " For Tess there
was no respire; for the drum never stopped, the man who fed it could not
stop and she, who had ro supply the man with untied sheaves, could not
stop either" ( 4I6 ). Its beastlike noises make conversation impossible:
13
Savage Theory
14
TheModerns
image, and the effaced relations therein contained, or its "sccret."8 Modern magic, in turn, can use the power of these fetishes to rcenliven the
shabby modcrn condition with images that touch at thc fragile, homesick,
and ex.haustcd human body.
Within thc isolation and secrecy of the cinema, a ncw intimaC)' was
established with a world that was, in many ways, its doublc and, in this
and other ways as wcll, its ncgation. Although one can only speculatc asto
the reasons why carly theorists consistently turned to the primitive when
faced with such an awesome double- especial! y when compelled ro name
the so urce of film's power- thc fact that this turn is fundamental ro cinema's thcorctical legacy demands attention. Modcrn artists and writers
depended on thc primitive as a source of affects that modernity itself
denied, and surcly this theoretical impulse partakes of some similar grasp
at real referents in primitive culn1re that has left merdy metaphoric rcsidue in modcrn life. A general chargc of yet anothcr instance of modernist
primitivism would only name, but not explain, this radical dependence.
Moreover, it would beg the questions posed by the endurancc, seniceability, and amorphousness of the primitivc in modern artistic, literary,
performativc, and theoretical production.
Reccnt criticism has revealed modernism's significant dcbt to the primitive as regards painting and sculpture, literature, and performance, as well
as in the violcnce of colonization itself. Primitivism is uscd toda y in thrce
distinct senscs. First, and apparently most simply, it means a lack of sophistication, a na'ivct. This is thc sense in which Noel Burch employs the
tcrm in his essay, "Primitivism and the Avant-Gardes:' which deals with
the relationship between primitive and avant-garde forms of cinema as
regards spectatorship in particular. 9 Similarly, the commonly used "primitive gazc" is largdy attributed to children, nonactors, and those new to the
form who look at the filming camera. This term, while romantically privileged at times, according to Burch, is itself intendcd as neutral and is
pejorative only in cases in which it is understood that onc should have
known more, the way in which Rousseau, for examplc, was considered a
primitive artist, as Roger Shattuck notes with regret in The Banquet
10
Yean-. This use of the term simply means artlessness, but artlessncss itself
has effects whcn used by modern artists. Shattuck remarks, for example,
that the construction of Satie's composition of"furniture music" for Rene
Clair's En!Y Acte "could not be more primitive." It dampens, by its repet-
15
tion, arbitrariness, and dull childish strucrure, "any strong tonal fecling." 11
This is similar to the result in avant-garde film which Burch remarks u pon.
Duc to its lack of narrativity and nonsensical structure, avant-garde cinema shares some of tl1e same fccling of"exteriority" that characterizcs our
conjuring in Burch's scnse of primitive cinema spectatorship. 12
Second, primitivism refers ro me acrual use of artifacts, dance, and
musical forms borrowed- and stolen- from aboriginal people as modcls
for painting and sculpture that fcature prominently in the works of, for
example, Picasso and Modigliani. 13 This rcsts on an "unqualified assumption of the inherent val ue of tl1c historical, psychological or formal primitive."14 Its motivation is characterizcd by John Goldwater in utopian
tcrms: "By having its roots in fundan1cntal and persuasive factors of cxperience, it will be bom cmotionally compelling to the individual and com-
Savage Theory
16
TheModerns
17
Savage Theory
18
The Modems
can theorists who initially took to the task of theorizing film and who are
canonized toda y as classical film theorists.
Ethnography and folk psychology, as weU as borrowing from practices
of distant and different contemporary societics su eh as Mexico and China,
were crucial, for example, to the film theoretical work of Sergei Eisenstein
( 1898- 1948). Eisenstein's "sensual thinking;'28 derived in part from his
own encounter with what he perceived as ancient Mexican society, 29 becarne one side of an abiding tension in his thcoretical writing until bis
death. In bis introduction to Eisenstein's monograph on Walt Disney,
Naum Kleinman states that Eisenstein's insistence on a "dual unity'' bctween sensuous and rational thought was for Eisenstein the fundamental
problcm of theory and art practice in general. Kleinman describes Eisenstein's thought as "The corrclation of the rationally-logical and the sensuous in art: in a creative act, in tbe strucrure of a work, in the process of
its perception.'' 30
Thc foreign other weigbs heavily on me "sensuous" si de of tls tension
throughout Eisenstein's writing about cinema, begiru1ing with his attention to Chinese ideogran1s as a model for montage structure. 31 His travel
to Mexjco, along with his making three films in nudcareer that deal with
pcasant culture, 32 increascd the tension betwecn the sensuous and the rational. These tensions were made marufest in the essay "Film Form: New
Problems" of 1935, and thcn finally barely feU short of breaking the balance in favor of sensuous tl1inking in Nonindifferent Nature and Eisenstein
on Disney. 33 Eisenstein is unjque in his consciousness of the implications of
deploying the primjtive in his theory and is mindful of the culmrally
charged namre ofhis sourccs, particularly Lvy-Bruhl. More than anyone,
Eisenstein defines the effectiveness of magic in artistic production.
Thc cncounter with cinema itself was often described in primitivist
terms, most remarkably in the writings ofVacbel Lindsay (1879-1931),
for whom cinema partook of both the most primitive and the most dcveloped forms of artistic expression: "The invention of the photoplay is as
grcat a step as was the beginning of picture-writing in the stone age. And
the cave-men and womcn of our slums secm to be the people most affected by this novelty, whicb is but an expression of the old in that spiral of
life which is going bigher wbilc seeming to repeat tl1e ancient phase.''34
The combination of thc photoplafs blunt effectiveness and the fact that it
calls upon pure, prelinguistic forms constirutes a shaky balancing act in
19
Savage Theory
20
Lindsay's book on film, The Art of the Moving Picture. Lindsay's claim to
theory rests on bis chapter that uses Egyptian hieroglyphics to account for
film's iconic ( rather than mimetic) power. Lindsay's thcory of film employs the primitive in two ways: first, in the stress he places on its function
in society as a medium for contact between savage and civilized, and
second, in the emphasis he places on its ability to call up primordial
meanings in a modern world.
Like Lindsay, Bla Balzs ( 1884-1949) often stages film spectatorship
in terms of a credulous spectator's encounter with an image, but bis examples range from the Chinese belief that one actual! y enters the landscape
painting one contemplatesto bis own experience of identification with the
film image: "We walk an1id crowds, ride, fly, or fall with the hero."35
Unlikc Lindsay, who was dealing with an earlier period in film history,
Balzs's encounter with the cinema takes on the characteristics of a sacred
rite. And here we move from the anthropological first contact meant to
distinguish those raw moments when an "untouched" society is brought
into purview, to what I term clase contact, the intimacy that constitutes
cinema's seduction for lost modernists. By regaining access ro gesture, the
cinema could reveal the secrets of things and sou.ls inexpressible in the
impoverished language of mere words. The cinema opened irs subjects
ancw to physiognomic inspection, allowing the spectator to pursue the
nonsensuous correspondences between image and meaning so as to convey, in Balzs's view, "non-rational emotions." Through itS access to the
nonrational, Balzs claimed a new expressivity for the cinema, one he
believed existed, however erroneously, in primitive gesntrallanguage. 36
Walter Benjamn ( 1 892-I940) and Jean Epstein ( 1897-1953) provide
striking cxamples of modernism's particular debt to the primitive regarding film. Por both of them, cinema's central distinguishing fea tu re was its
mechanical nantre. Whereas Epstein's "cinema machine" approaches the
status of an independent will, and Benjan1in's emphasis on "technological
reproducibility'' laid the ground for an immediate and bodily felt mode of
perception that he called the "optical unconscious:' it was the camera's
perceived ability to circumvent human mediation that gave it such unnatural power. Por Benjamn, "a ditferent nature opens itsclf to the can1era
than opens to the naked eye- if only beca use an unconsciously penetrated
space is substituted for a space consciously explored by man."3 7
The enigmatic and, I argue, "second nature"38 of this "ditferent nature"
TheModems
all but haunts early film theory. What was this thing, both object and
imagc, that doubled the real world, its duality, in itself an enigma? Its
powcr secmed to come from the mechanical, which, in the arena of commodit)' production and its labor, was busily at work endowing things with
life such that they dominated people. The primary importance of the
camera as a machine was, for both Benjamn and Epstein, inseparable
from the connection it facilitated to primitive and archaic ways of perceiving and cxperiencing the world. Whercas today this connection has
bccn deflcctcd onto the unconscious, and thus psychoanalytic theory has
achieved some dominance o ver the discipline of cinema studies as a whole,
Critica! Theory39 confiares the unconscious and cultural anthropology so
that the notion of the archaic is at one and the same time primal and
primitive. 4 Freud himsclf combined the tvvo in bis early work. Tbe very
notion of the unconscious, for examplc, is derived from primitive animism. H.D.'s Tribute to Freud, wbich revolves around their discussion of
Preud's primitive artifacts and their mythic dclvings into the archaic past,
sbows bow deeply Preud fclt the relationship between the unconscious
and tbe primitive.
Benjamin's distinction bctween the contemplative perception of auratic
works of art and the tactile apperception of those that are reproduced
through tecbnology rests, in the "Work of Art" essay ( 1935-36 ), on pitting mystifying magic, the priest, and painting against science, the surgeon, and finally film. "The magician and surgeon:' Benjamn wrote,
"compare to painter and can1eraman. The painter maintains in bis work a
natural distance from reality, the cameraman penetrares deeply into its
web."41 Benjamn has copious footnotes about medica! surgery, but his
reference to magic is a general one, deployed, along with the mystification
of religion, as a rhetorical foil to the nearness and etfectiveness of mechanically reproduced artworks. The distinction's prominence and didactic
simplicity in "Work of Art" obscure the more complcx and enigmatic
relation modern technological forms bad to primitive and archaic forms in
Benjamin's theory of representation as a whole. In bis essay, "On Language as Such and the Language of Man" ( I9I6), for example, magic is
the privileged mechanism by which words come ro mean things. 42 Benjamn uses the primitive in a redemptive mode to locate the source of the
mimicry and tactility that fea tu re in bis theory of modern representational
forms. This theory poses the dialectical image and the redeemable wish
21
Savage Theory
22
TheModems
23
Savage Theory
24
TheModems
filmmakcrs. Their cngagcment with the cinema bears thc marks of what
Bcnjamin called "the next childhood mcmory;' in which one understands
technology not merely as new; instead, such childlikc interest and curiosity as thcirs inevitably links tcchnology to tl1e archaic: "Every childhood
achicves somcthing great, irrcplaceable for mankind. Through its interest
and curiosity about all kinds of discoveries and machinery, cvcry childhood tics technological achievcment to thc old symbol-worlds. Thcrc is
nothing in thc rcalm of nantrc that would by dcfinition be cxempt from
such a tic. But it takes form in the aura ofhabit, not in the aura of novelty"
( 6-7 ) . Epstein and Eiscnstcin seem never to have lost thc child's magical
thinking. Their reveric with the form- its aura of novel!)' rather than of
habit- does not sharc thc spirit of melancholia that so pcrvades the work
of Balzs, Benjamn, and Kracaucr. 51 Thc rcason for tl1is, of course, is obvious: Thcy were filmmakcrs. To put it in crude terms, modern atfective
scarcit)' crcated a market for tl1cir product.
And so wc ntrn now to thc story of languagc's povert)' overcomc by
technology's bount)'. In Eiscnstcin's The Old and the New, the cream scparator announces a new product: the sensuous vision that is available now
at the cinema.
25
cHAPTER
Our language is like dish washing: we ha ve only din:y water and di~ dishrags,
and yet we manage to get everything clean. - Niels Bohr 1
Stephen. (looks behind.) So that gesntre, not music, not odours, would be a
universallanguage, the gift of tongues rendering visible not the lay sense but
the first entelechy, the structural rhythm. - James Joyce 2
The breaking of pure expression into a systcm of just so many dirty words
has been variously marked by critical theorists as a move that can be
characterized as one from primitive namre to rational culture. The mpetus t0 see film, a medium distinguished by its technology, as a means of
reestablishing relationships between the word and the thing it seeks to
represent that have been lost through the rationalization of language, to
make manifest the stages of thought betwccn image and idea cffaced by
ha bits of association, nonetheless is very strong in early film theory. In his
writing, Eisenstein addressed film's expressivc potential only after having
developed the cognitive line of intellectual cinema. When he did, like his
contemporaries Vachel Lindsay and Bla Balzs, for examplc, Eisenstein
turned to primitive theories oflanguage and identification. In turning his
attention to forms of expression such as gesmrc and thc interior monologue that are less directly logic-bound than thc cause-and-effect relations
of montagc theory, Eisenstein wished to cstablish an egual tenson between the sensual and cognitive elements of film language.
The first section of this chapter deals witl1 thc dependence of enlightened thought on theories of the primitive to define the "shape" of sensual
thinking in Eisenstein's theory of film. The second section introduces the
relationships between Benjamin's and Eisenstein's theories of language
and film. Benjamin's and Eisenstein's thoughts about children, language,
and play are similar, and when taken together they illuminate the activities
that occur within the very marked schism between word and thing, image
and idea, which becomes the central arena of cinema and its theory for
Eisensten and his contemporaries. Thinking of cinema as such an arena,
the final section of this chapter mrns to the practical prcssures to make a
popular film that will create enthusiasm for excess rather than subsistence
production that informed Eisenstein's project, The Old and the Ne~v. In the
film's famous cream-separaror scguence, Eisenstein greets a new magical
god, which appears not by classical but by modern machinations.
The trajectories that map out a semiotic theory of language, based on
arbitrary relations between thc word and the thing on the one hand, anda
sensuous or mystical connection between the word and the orginary
thing on the other, seem equally inadcquate to describe Eisenstein's theory of how a word or image is produced and perceivcd in hs formulation
of"sensual thinking;''3
In what follows, I draw from Critica! Theory to map out a different
trajecrory more suited to sensual thinking, which takes the lack of the
identity between the word and the thing not just as a priori but as fons et
origen. Horkhemer and Adorno mark the split between word and thing in
the Dialectic of Enlightemnent as that which detona tes the Enlightenment
and clears the way for bourgeois formalism. What is more, it can be witnessed, for example, when Odysseus plays a word game, using lingustic
cunning to save his neck in bis cncounter with Polyphemus. In the chaptcr, "Odysseus or Myth and Enlightcnment:' Horkheimer and Adorno
chart Odysseus' worldly cunning. A physically weaker man than the forces
of nantre and myth that threaten him, Odysseus' power les in his rationality. Ths enables him to distinguish the word from the sense of tl1e
word to his own advantage, which, in the two nstances they sclect, saves
Odysseus' life.
In response to the demand that he listen to the Sirens' song in order to
pass through the choppy channel betwccn Scylla and Charybdis, he binds
himself to the mast, thus fulfilling the demand as uttered, but not the
meaning of it, because he prevents his own scduction by the song. Odysseus placcs wax in the ears of thc oarsmen so that tl1ey can't hear his orders
to follow the sound of the Sirens' song. Thus, Horkhein1er and Adorno
assert, the point at which thc "mythic destiny,Jatum, was one with the
spokcn word" had been transgrcssed. 4
In his cncountcr with Polyphemus, Odysscus "learns that thc samc
27
Savage Theory
28
word can mean different things." When Polyphemus asks Odysseus his
name, he answers, "Nobody." "Because both the hcro and Nobody are
possible connotations of the name Udeis;' Horkheimer and Adorno assert, "the former is able to break the anathema of the name .... The
artfice of self-preservation depends on the process which decrees the relation [ rather than unity] between word and thing. Odysseus' two contradictO!)' actions in his encounter with Polyphemus, bis answering to the
name, and his disowning it, are nevertheless one. He acknowledges himself ro himself by denying himself under the name Nobody; he saves his
life by losing himself. This linguistic adaptarion to death contains the
schema of modern mathematics."5 A play on words is nor innoccnt but
marks the beginning of language's rationalization into a system of tricks
and shortcuts more concerned with sclf-prcservation than cxpression.
Walter Benjamn situares the splitting of the word from its idea in the
Garden of Eden. In the essay, "On Language as Such and the Language of
Man;' pure communication ( what he calls the language-mind) fa lis into
language itsclf: "the Fall marks the birth of the human word ." 6 To consign
language to either convencional semiorics or to maintain the myth of
essential, unmediated meaning of the language-mind does not deal sufficiently with eitl1er reifying structures or expression, according ro Benjamn: "Through the word manis bow1d to the language of things. The
human word is the name of things. Hence ir is no longer conceivable, as
the bourgeois view of language maintains, thar the word has an accidental
rclation ro its objecr, thar ir is a sign for things ( or knowledge of them)
agreed on by some convention. Language never gives mere signs. However, the rejection of bourgeois by mysricallinguisric rheory equally resrs
on a misunderstanding" ( I I 6- r 7).
On rhc one hand, language never gives "mere signs"- thcrc is sometl1ing more to words than a simple, arbitrary signa!; yet on the other hand,
the "mysrical thcory'' in which the word is simply the essence of the thing
is incorrecr because tl1e "thing in itsclf has no word" ( 1 17). In "The
Ground of lntentional Immediacy;' Benjamn delineares the distance berween the referent and the thing one intends to convey with the terms
"pure nan1e;' "signifying word;' and "mere sign." The pure name doesn't
signify but refers us ro the essence of the thing; the signifying word "contains the name within it but has an unclear relation ro the object's essential
narure"; and the mere sign merely refers to the signifier itself ( it is nota
29
Savage Theory
30
31
Savage Theory
32
discoursc that cssentialises and hypothesiscs notions of subject production/positions, autonomises the discursivc and invokes thc Ucs whenever
the qucstion of politics and the real is mcntioncd" (52). For Willemen,
inner speech is the "si te where the subjective and the social are articula red"
(52). lnncr spccch appcars as just such an articularan for Eisenstein's
theory of sensual thinking. And, as we will see, film images are "closely rela red, although not for the reasons usually invoked, to drearn images: both
can be regarded as 'grounded in folklore, popular myths, lcgcnds, linguistic idiom, proverbial idioms and current jokcs"' (52) . 16 For it was preciscly u pon folklore and myth that Eisenstein callcd to further define sensual thinking in thcory, as well asto activare expression in the cinema.
While in Pars, en route to the United States and then Mexico, Eisenstein picked up Lvy-Bruhl's How Natives Think. He could not find Frazer's
The Golden Bough: "Never mind! Meanwhile, Lvy-Bmhl suffices, and
through its pages I make the most dizzying excursions into the secrets of
what already takes on the more precise definition of 'prelogic.' " 17 In the
final section of his autobiography's chapter "Intellcctual Cinema;' Eisenstein leaps effortlessly from Paris and Lvy-Bruh.l to Mexico and sensual
thinking only to land finally at Joyce's door ro hear him read "Anna Livia
Plurabelle" on a grarnophone. Like anthropologists and other travelers
befo re him, Eisenstein uncovered the secrets of language through contact
with the primitive on foreign turf, a contact unavailablc at home in the
magical and unproblematic way it had occurred:
that most unreal and most unpronounccable namc:
Popocatepctl.
Ha, ha!
For I ha ve only ro raisc my hcad from the page 1 am reading rosee bcforc m y
eycs the summit of that snow-white extinct volcano in thc blindingly bluc
tropical sky.
1 am in Mexico.
And 1 am sitting at the foot of this "verbal abstraction" that has borrowed, ir
would seem, the virginal accuracy of its slanting sidcs from thosc Japancsc
prints of Fujiyama's countenance, which has bored so many millions.
Popocatepetl is so real that once we nearly crashcd in ro its erater in thc tiny
plane.... Curiosity drovc us to pecr inro thc cxtinct crater of the mysterious Popo.
33
Savage Theory
34
of the film. Thc trcnd of thoughts and the movement of thoughts were
representcd as the exhaustive basis of everything that transpircd in the
film" ( r 29). Thc cssay attempts to account for the production of feelings
in the spectator as well, a "deepening" of his cinema / theory project. AJthough it is structured rhetorically so as to ground the concept of sensual
thinking in yet another material base, in this case drawn from anthropology and folk psychology, the essay's prehistory (which includcs his trip to
Mexico, whose profound effects are docun1ented in the book Mexico Accordg to Eisenstein21 ) and the repeated use of thc tcrm "expression" suggest culture and the unconscious as factors in the creation of meaning.
This m ove ro use and understand other forces that add to the creation of
meaning that lie outside or beneath the material signs of the tcxt is a shift
very similar ro that of another thinker who began with a material base, in
this case the body, to explain effects on consciousness. Freud began with
neurology, but finally abandoned the material body as thc cause of effccts on consciousness and introduced instead the wKonscious. For both
thinkers, human consciousness has always ceded thc powcr to produce
other meanings and effects ro things and people outsidc it, beyond its
control. Although in developed societies we no longcr can abidc a literal
belief in, say, animism, we still account for the effects of those causes that
remain unknown or outside our consciousness: for Freud, in his concept
of the unconscious; for Eisenstein, in the sphere of artistic production and
representation.
Eisenstein goes about his justification of the theory of sensual thinking
as a rcenactmcnt of modes of primitive specch and thought in much thc
san1e way that Freud justifies the concept of thc wKonscious. Thc attribution of a consciousncss ro the unconscious, Freud belicvcd, partakcs of thc
long-standing logic by which we have formerly attributed consciousncss
to inanimatc matter, ro plants, and ro other hwnans: "Consciousness
makes each of us aware only of his own states of mind; that other people,
too, possess a consciousness is an inference which we draw by analogy
from thcir observable utterances and actions, in order to make this behaviour of theirs intelligible to us .... This inference ( or this identification) was formerly extended by the ego to other human beings, ro animals, plants, inanimate objects and to the world at large.... To-day, our
critica! judgment is already in doubt on the question of consciousness in
animals; we refusc to admit it in plants and we regard the assumption of
35
Savage Theory
36
Eiscnstein's most amusing example is the Bororo bclicf that a pcrson has
a simultaneous identity: He or she is both himsclf or hcrsclf and a red
parakcet. Though this practice is unacceptablc to the rational mind, nonethcless we are capablc of maintaining, in fact when acting on the stage we
must maintain such a dual conviction. His evidence concludes: "simultaneous actuality is present even in the most inveterare supporter of 'transsubstantiation.' There are, in fact, too few cases known in the history of the
theater of an actor leaning on the 'fourth [ nonexistent] wall!'" ( 1 37).
This dual identification holds true as well for the spectator who refrains
from rushing to the stage to save a character in peril. Though Eisenstein
drew this example from Lvy-Bruhl, he could easily have found models,
even among the Boro ro, for other kinds of identification, sueh as identifying so much with a drawing that the mere sight of it would kill oneP The
modcl of identification employed by Balzs, on the other hand, is that of
actually going into Chinese paintings: The painter who fell in love with
one of his painted women enters the painting, and a year la ter a picture of
a newborn child appcars. 28 Balzs is probably drawing from de Groot, but
Lvy-Bruhl cites several similar examples of Chinese identification taken
from de Groot's The Religious System of China 29 with which Eisenstein
could ha ve dealt.
Taking an example from Wundt's Elements of Folk Psychology, Eisenstein
sees a Bushman's description of a colonial encounter as a series of "descriptive single images." The Bushman's "chain of concrete single images"
functions, for Eisenstein, like a "shooting scripr:' whereas the abstraer
language of the colonizcr would have to be broken clown to the Bushman's concrete formulation of the event in order to be translated into
film. 3 For Wundt, gestural language is governed by the arrangement of
words in their perceptual order: "The thinking itself may be called concrete."31 Not only is it concrete, it is precise. Klamath language has not one
word for walking but many, each specifying the particular gestures involved. Primitive language, which articulated concrete images and spccified human gesture, was, Eisenstein maintained, precisely what the planning of a play or a film demanded.
The gesture, direct speech that can be expressed untranslated into
filmed images, metaphor, metonymy, dual identification, the concept of
the organic whole, are all rooted in primitive thought and language: '~
is nothing else but an artificial retrogression in the field of psychology
37
Savage Themy
38
and the skulllike a face;' as Yampolsky cites Eisenstein (187). The film
director is he who masks the skull beneath the skin, deploying the picasures of unmasking that the magician, the detective story, and physiognomy can all claim to hold. "The creation of meaning;' Yampolsky coneludes, "depends on the intuitively magic physiognomic disclosure of the
line which lies concealcd within the body of the object ( or text) - of the
'bone-structure'" ( r 87-88).
For Eisenstein, primitive language represents a stage in which language
was lcss abstraer, more descriptive of physical reality, of actions, where
signifier and signified were dosel y bound together. The process by which
a word signifies a meaning is given precise attention in the essay "Word
and Image," written in 1938. The mental process by which a word signifies
is based in part on convention, for exan1plc, the convention by which we
read the time, but aJso on a set of consciously unacknowlcdged associations, the things that characterize the time of day denoted. "Psychological
ha bit" tends to reduce this signifying chain so that we rccognize only the
resulting idea. This whole host of associations are preciscly those that
cinema can materiaJize so that not just the aggregate imagc, in this case the
time of day, but its evocation in our consciousness and feelings is possiblc.
Inner speech is not just the habitual shape of our thought but also, in
terms of the relationship of signifier to signified, the chain of associations
that transforms a word into an idea. What has been absorbed by Eiscnstein's phrase "habit logic" ( employed in both "Word and Image" and
"Film Form") are not only the conventions that thc semiotic thcory of
language uses to account for the way words mean but a sometimes primitive, sometimes unconscious constellation of possiblc associations whose
nan1re is arbitrary only because the attendant chain of associations is ignored or forgotten.
Like Eisenstein's, Walter Benjamin's theory of languagc cannot be fit into
either a semiotic or an essentialist mold. An identity between word and
thing existed in what he calls the "language-mind" bcfore man's fall into
language in the Garden of Eden, but he holds no store in trying to reestablish that identity. Remnants of that pure identity exist in "the language of pure feeling;' which Benjamn identifies with music, the lament
of the mourning play, 36 and the "child's view of color." The child's sighting
of color, writes Benjamn, "creates a pure mood." Beca use it is immediate,
39
Savage Theory
40
If Benjamin's essay "On the Mimctic Faculry'' suggests not that facult)r's
loss but its transformation, onc of the kcy elemcnts of such a retooling
would be the sort of perception cinema affords. Its "nearness;'46 its tactile
41
Savage Theory
effecr47 displaces the meaning of the sign altogether. The close-up, the
42
pan, slow, fast, and reverse motion provide us not with an object for
contemplation, for an exercise in reading signs; cinema instead produces
an immediate, tactile encounter with the modern world. In essence, as
Gertrud Koch puts it, the eye touches what the hand cannot grasp. 48 The
new perception cinema affords is revealing, analytical, and enchanting:
"The film on the one hand extends our comprehension of the necessities
which rule our lives; on the other hand, it manages to assure us of an
inunense and unexpected field of action."49 The optical unconscious describes a mode of perception more suited ro the modern world rhan
auratic, distanced, perceprion. Befare film, "our taverns and our metropolitan street, our office and furnished room, our railroad stations and our
factories appeared to have us locked up hopelessly." Then "came the film
and burst this prison-world asunder by rhe dynamite of the tenth of a
second" ( 236). Benjamn opposes optical- and he re the terminology is
confusing beca use he uses the word optical ro disringuish from tactilecontemplation, which he associates with auratic, nontechnological works
of art, to tactile appropriation, which influences perception in an unconscious, habitual way, that is, withour a conscious perspective. Ir is the
mechanical aspect of the camera that allows these works of art to touch
our senscs so directly, beca use an "unconsciously penetrared space is substituted for a space consciously explored by man" ( 236). With its technological mimesis of a splintered and dcscnsitized world, cinema providcs
the means ro combar the perils of alienation.
Miriam Hansen has highlighted the political importance this hcld for
Benjan1in with her emphasis on his concept of "innervation."50 In Benjamin's estimation, she writes, cinema could provide "a perceptual training groLmd for an industrially transformed physis: 'To make the vast rechnical apparan1s of our time an object of human innervarion- this is the
historical task in whose service film has its true meaning."'51 It is in this
sense of"social innervation" that we mighr understand Dziga Vertov's The
Man with a Movie Camera ( 1929), for example, and even the "kino-eye"
itself. "Collective innervation;' writes Hansen, countered the "expropriation of the senses" by the "spiral of senSOI')' alienation, phantasmagoria,
and violence;' which are the very handiwork of technology itself ( 38).
These "can be countered only on the terrain of technology itself, by means
of perceptual technologies that allow for a figurative, mimetic engage-
43
Savage Theo1'y
44
consistent with early impulses in film thcory but bcars direct!y on thc
problems faccd by Eiscnstein's film practice. Soviet society was in the
throes of an encountcr bctween technology and the primitive.
The extremely limited access to an understanding of precisely "how
natives think," obvious in the assumption of superstition and ignorancc
that marks the beginning of Eisenstein's The Old and the New ( 1929) or in
the cunning and treachery alluded to briefly in the encoumer with the
"Savage Division" in Octobn ( 1927), where munta1 suspicion uncoils into
ecstatic spcctacle, was an understanding tl1at even Trotsky termed Tolstoyan at its best. 55 Lcaders of the Revolution like Len in and Trotsky grew
up in landowner families on farms and had a lot of contact with peasants;
nonetheless, Trotsky, for example, in ~v Lije, rages against the peasants'
stupidity whcn they failed to put his gcometry lesson into practicc to
measure the land. Ironically, for Trotsky, what was wrong with primitive
thinking- tl1c "dull empiricism of thc pcasant''56 - was peasants' inabilit:y
to privilege theory ovcr pctty facts. Still, primitive spccch and primitive
customs bccame poetic theory for Eiscnstcin in 1935.
Eisenstein's "experiment intelligible to millions" 57 makes the encounter
betwecn tcchnology and the primitivc cxplicit, and also a comedy. The
scene in The Old and the N ew58 in which the land is brokcn u p by turns into
preposterously small proportions, for instance, is intended as a funny
show of how the peasant can't see the forest for tl1c trces. This not only
misrepresents peasant production, it also bclies a furtl1er clash of interests
between tl1e Soviet state and tl1e peasantry whose results were humorless.
Though it is common still today to couch debates about land tenure in
terms of staving off the small and unworkable proportions that result from
dividing land between the too many children peasants have begotten, this
was clearly not the case in thc Soviet countryside. By making fun of thcir
land division Eisenstein is saying that pcasants simply don't understand
how to divide their land efficiently, whcrcas the Soviet, in this and many
other tl1ings agricultural, knows better.
A. V. Chayanov's (1888- 1939) study, The Theory of Peasant Economy,
described tl1c system of land division in Central Russia. This may well be
where Eisenstcin gets thc image of land being divided into what scem like
ridiculously small pieces, bccause thc land was divided into very thin strips
to ensure thc allotmcnt of similar quality of land first during the 1861 land
reform and then far more extcnsively by furthcr egalitarian repartitioning
45
Savage Theory
46
47
Firrt Comact
CHAPTER J
First Contact
To see a thousand immobile heads whose gazes are aimed ar, monopolized
and haunted by a single enormous facc on the scrcen towards which thcy all
converge. Such a rerrif),ing tete-a-tete. An idol and the crowd. Like thc cults of
India. But hcrc the idol is living, and this idol is aman.- M. Jcan Choux, citcd
in P. Adan1s Sitney, The Avant Carde Film
Early film theory often betrays a fascination wirh the audience's fascination with the cinema. The nature of this fascination is neither voyeuristic
nor vicarious; rather, ir is a complex refracrion of theorists' felt contact
with the image-producing machine. A model for this fascination on the
part of early theorists can be seen in cinematic representations of first
contact berween the savage and rhe civilized, wherein primirives' reactions
to the strangeness of civiJized custom, ornamentation, and technology
activare the spectator's nostalgia for the recent pasr in which technology
was thoughr to be new and wondrous. Ir also confirms a sen se of progress.
But most striking is the way such representations of technology's magic
enunciare the cnlightencds' own primitive wonder at the machine.
Contemporary popular cinematic reenactments of firsr contacr produce
the pleasures of voyeuristic irony when they simulare early viewers' responses ro what was then new technology. Francis Ford CoppoJa's Dracula ( 1992) , for example, represen red the titiilation and fear often projecred onto firsr contacr with the cinema and other relatcd technology 1
whcn Count Dracula takcs his blood bride through a gallcry of the "cinema of attractions"2 clown n1rn-of-thc-ccnmry London streets. DracuJa
chooses a motion picrurc gallery to reveal himself to Mina, whom he takes
to be the incarnation of his long dead wife, Elizabeta. Fascinated and
afraid- utterly seduced - she lies back and warches Dracula's eyes become those ofhis woif/ dog, then transform from cold blue ro fiery blood
red, then become once more Dracula's eyes, then match rhe cold blue shot
of the moon. In the back of the frame a different sort of revclation alto-
gether takes place. Trick films, such as that of a naked woman appearing by
magic in a man's lap, form a gallcry of taboos from perverse to cute, but
the film that forms the backdrop for the scene's clmax is a film made after
cinema's primal scene: Lumiere's Amval of a Train ( 1895, Francc) . The
image, in ncgative, is of the Empire Express from a 1901 Biograph film
called The Ghost Train, a far more menacing version of thc steel beast. 3 The
conflation of spectatorial and sexual seduction is not new; for exan1ple, in
Max Ophuls'sLetter Froman Unknown Woman ( 1948, United States), the
lovers take a simulated coach ride and travcl scenes are run across the
windows, creating a kind of protocinema. These examples not only highlight the idea that spectator seduction bolsters sexual seduction, they also
demonstrate the way this new technology is and was often thought to
leave one awcstruck and vulnerable. It is in this vein that it is common to
stage seduction scenes with new lovers warchi ng old movies.
Quite a few popular period films whose represented era predates the
moving picture extend this seductive interest in the fascination with visual
technology to other devices such as the telescope. Protocontact, in this
sense, has become part of the formula for historica1 films that deal in
cultural conflict. In Kevin Cosmer's Dances with Wolves ( 1990), for example, the lone soldier Dunbar befriends a group of SiOLL'< Indians. While
they huddle together on a hill to observe a herd ofbuffalo, Dunbar uses bis
monocular to get a doser view. He passes it to Kicking Bird ( Graham
Greene), who jolts back, srunned by the dose-up view from the white
man's monocular. This scene is performcd again in Kevin Reynolds's
Robin Hood: Prince ofThieves ( 1991 ), when rl1e sophisticated Moor (Morgan Freeman) unfolds a leather pouch that contains a telescope and hands
it to Robin Hood ( Kevin Cosmer), the primitive Englishman who sees in
it a close-up of an advancing encmy. Milking the moment more than is
customary, Costner's Robn Hood flails his arm pointlcssly to fight off the
aggressors who are still, of course, very much in the distance.
These moments of extreme voyeurism are generally intended as comic.
They never announcc themsclves, they come and go quickly, but they
recur over time and across genres. From the extended and prodding shot
Robert Flaherty forces overlong when Nanook bites at a gramophone
record at the fur trader's hut (Nanook of the North, 1921 ), to Lottie's
(Butterfly McQueen) quizzical and easily missed gesrure when she finds
herself hearing a voice from a litde black object, as if outdone by the
49
Savage Theqry
50
Firrt Contact
their primitive affinity with the machinc. In effect, thesc theorists reproduce first contact outside the theatcr to master thc audience's reactions
to the vicwing of cinema itself. Whether to serve spectator or thcoretical
pleasure, this position finds favorable ground in primitivism, that complex mangle of imputations to and fascinations with people whosc very
difference generally turns out to be marked by the stampede of progrcss
o ver their bodies- their status in the realm of the real always circumvented by metaphor, myth, and misrccognition. Facets of theoretical first
contact reach bcyond mere moments of primitivist imputation. For not
only is thc primitive made primitive and tcchnology made magical in this
encow1ter, but modern man himself is thrown into primitive relief.
Bla Balzs's Theory of the Film and Vachel Lindsay's The Art of the
Moving Pictttre are shot through with the metaphor of first contact. The
people for whom the lack of distancc was altogether ncw, for whom this
nearness, whether an cmotional absorption or a tactile hit, for whom
contact with the work of art was a shock rather than a thrill, were thosc
people who were acculturated to European aesthetics and art philosophy.
Amcricans, women, children, and primitives, never so schooled, on the
other hand, approach cinema with curiosity and readily accede to this
immediate form. 4
The distance that exists between spectator and work of art is, to Balzs's
mind, culturally specific to Europcans. "The Chincsc of Old;' writes
Balzs, "rcgarded their art with a different eye?' He then recounts a tale in
which the spectator is so taken by the beauty of a Chinese landscape
painting that he enters the picture, follows the path to the mountains, and
is nevcr scen again. "Anothcr story tells of a young man who saw a beautiful picture of lovely maidcns disporting themsclves in a meadow full of
flowcrs. Onc of the maidcns caught his cyc and he fell in love with her. He
entered the picture and took the maidcn for his wife. A year later a little
child appeared in the picrurc" (so). This literal absorption by the picture
serves Balzs as a general model for film identification throughout his
Theory ofFilm. He must conjure up a different modcl to explain the humor
of old films, which bccomes a form of alteric recognition.
The humor of old films, according to Balzs, stems from the fact that
"we rccognize ourselves in thcir clumsy primitivencss" (37). This is the
kind of recognition on which Robert Flahcrty counted when he built the
gramophone sccne into Nanook ofthe North, arguably the most criticalJy
51
Savage Theory
52
Firrt Contact
53
Savage Theory
54
First Contact
Mmz's Genesis was an important development in Griffith's progress away
from the spectacle toward films with a message, and was billed as a comedy in order to sell it to tl1e public. The film opens with the explanation
that it is "A Psychological Comedy Founded upon the Darwinian Theory
of thc Evolution of Man." It begins with an elderly man and his two
formally dressed grandchildren walking up a mountain cliff witl1 all the
regala of a Sunday afternoon picnic. The rwo children are fighting, and
when tl1e little boy picks up a stick as if to hit the girl, the grandfather
admonishes him and settles them clown for a didactic lesson in tl1e invention and use of weapons. They sir on a rock on tl1e shrub- and stonecovered hillside, while fields of close-cut grass and young, symmetrically
spaced trees of the town below form the eminently civilized background.
Though the film within the film- the lesson about the successful invention of weaponry to outwit sheer brute force- does not really suit me
grandfatl1er's purpose, the boy does throw clown his stick and kiss his
sister in the end. The bodily gestures are not as impressive as Lindsay
makcs out; the cave peoplcs' hunched backs and extended arms move
begrudgingly, while their faces subtly express fear and !ove rather than
crude, comic reactions.
The climax of the picn1re's "comed y" comes when Weak Hands accidentally invents a weapon. All alone, he sits in his hut fumbling with his stick,
which he accidentally inserts into a conveniently doughnut-shaped rock.
He bits himself accidentally with thc rock and feels the pain. The gesture
of discovery is tl1en extended as he tries to figure out what has just happened and, after much tria! and error, re-creares the weapon, for it had
fallen back into its two picces. The comical extension of this moment is
similar to Costner's antics in Robin Hood and Flahcrty's construction of
thc scene in which Nanook bites the gramophonc record. Whcn Weak
Hands finally connects the pain of accidentally hitting himself with the
stone to the idea tl1at he can make a weapon, he emerges from his cave
victorious, holding it aloft ro conquer Brutc force, first hitting him on
each hand, then knocking him over the head, in the same order in which
he had unwittingly experimented on himself. This extended scene of crude
encounter and the creation of a weapon is surcly what Lindsay refers to
when he aligns the car mcchanic with the primitive in his text.
Lindsay finds the audiencc's fascination with tcchnology itsclf primitive
in narure, although his own fascination with watching primirivcs' (Amer-
55
Savage Theory
56
Wcak Hands ( Robcrt Harron ) invcnts a wcapon from a stick and a convenicntly doughnut-shaped rock inMan's Genesis ( 191 2). Courtcsy of Musetun
of Modern Art Stills Archive.
icans~
Firrt Contaa
rhe incipient or rampant spced-mania in every American" ( 1 3). The assault on tl1e senses and subjectivity thar modcrnity represented to bis
European counterparts is simply American "speed-mania." American sensibilities are ready-made receprors for the antics produced by mechanical
rcpresentation.
Lindsay contended thar it was nor a defect in photoplays that "human
bcings tend to become dolls and mcchanisms, and dolls and mechanisms
tend ro become human" (32), but a qualiry ro be used; for dolls, marionenes, and mechanisms pervaded American daily Life. Repeatedly, Lindsay refers ro the hun1anization of objecrs, or "this yearning for personalit:y
in furniture" ( 33). Although he does not idenrify ir with reification, tl1e
crasure of meaning brought about by the objecr's exchangeability, and tl1e
object's rapid endowment with new lively mcanings otherwise thought of
as commodity fetishism, the appcal of animared objects ro which he refers
is similar ro that which Karl Marx dcployed ro introduce tl1e very topic of
commodity fctishism itsclf. In the bcginning of his chapter, "The Ferishism of Commodities ( and the Secret Thercof) ;'Marx hit u pon precisely
the same exan1ple: "Ir is as clcar as noon-day, that man, by his inclusa-y,
changes the forms of the materials furnished by Nature, in a way as to
make them useful to him. Thc form of wood, for insrance, is altered, by
making a rabie out of it. Yet, for all that, the rabie continues to be that
common, every-day thing, wood. But so soon as it steps forth as a commodit)', it is changed into something transccndcnt. lt not only stands with
its fcer on the grlmd, but, in rclation to all other commodities, it stands
on its hcad, and evolves out of its wooden brain grotesque ideas, far more
wonderful than ' table-turning' evcr was." 10 Thc wood of the tree was once
uscd to make an ordinary, serviceablc rabie, but on the day that table
becamc a conunodity, it turncd into a magically animated attraction. By
introducing his chapter on commodity fetishism with such a magic act,
Marx draws on the magical appcal of lcvitation and the animistic belief
tl1at a rabie can have ideas in its "wooden brain." Lindsay identifies the
desire to bring things to life as a primitivc one: "Mankind in his childhood
has always wanted his furniture todo such things [ to move on their own
accord] ." 11 The "mechanical or non-human object," says Lindsay, is "apt
ro be the hero in most any sort of photoplay while tl1e producer remains
utterly unconscious of the fact'' ( 35). Lindsay then urges film producers
to take up the object as thc real hero of the photoplay. Drawing on a Line
57
Savage Theory
58
from Mother Goose, he concludes, "Lct [ the stick] beat thc dog most
heroically" ( 35). Thc photoplay's animation of objects satisfies the noble
caveman's delight in much the san1c way as did fairy tales, myths, and
legends of old.
Lindsay's model operares with an extremely elastic notion of the primitive, flexible enough to include both the car mechanic and the cave painter.
lt fails, however, to na me or explain "that thing in the cavc-man attending
the show that madc him take note in othcr ccnntries of the rope that bcgan
to hang the butchcr, the fire that began to burn the stick, and the stick that
began to bcat thc dog" (I28). In Lindsay's case, this fascination is above
all a contemporal)' thcorctical reaction to film as a mass phcnomcnon that
is being deflccted onto the primitive, but whose plcasurcs are archaic and
noble by naturc, whcreas Marx simply counts on tablc-turning's appcal to
show the fantastical nature of thc commodity. The origin of thc namre of
spectator pleasurc in magical acts, and the animation of objects in particular, is simply a given, for Lindsay as wcll as for Marx.
The significant cinema tic properties Lindsay aligned with the primitivc
spectatorship were a distracted audicncc that was intrigued with technology and invention and an unabashed endorscment of cinema's ability to
endow objects with life. Above all, Lindsay shares with othcr great primitivists a particularly modern notion that thc primitive (in this case, the
primitive art form he calls the photoplay) produces a step backward anda
step forward at the same time. Cinema was "but an expression of the old
in that spiral of life which is going higher while seeming to repeat the
ancient phase" ( 171). Eisenstein's concept of a "dual unity:' described in
chapter 2, also expressed this desire: "The dialectic of works of art is both
an impetuous progrcssive rise ... and a simultaneous penetration ...
into thc layers of profoundest sensual thinking." 12
The cinema was also, and only apparcntly contradictorily, Amcrica's
precmincnt cultural project in Lindsay's view. He thought of tl1e New
World as a primarily literary rathcr than visual artistic culture and berated
thc low ratio of art muscums to libraries. He says, for example, "The more
characteristic America became, thc lcss she had to do with tl1c plastic
arts." 13 The photoplay was the birth of visual art in America, its invention,
"as great a step as the invention of picntre writing" ( 171 ) . He bcgan his
chapter on hicroglyphics, the only chapter in his book with theoretical
aspirations, witl1 the analogy between picture writing and the photoplay,
First Co1ltaa
and bctween cave dwellers and slum film audiences. As muchas the photoplay is an invention, it al so marks a return to pictoriallitcrary communication, to which he finds a contcmporary analogy in thc modero billboard
advertisement.
The photoplay combined two artistic forms, tl1e written and tl1e plastic,
to produce in turna dual mode of signification. An image had its primary
meaning, tl1at is, it referred to its rcferent via conventions or iconic resemblance, and its secondary meaning: "From a proper balance of primary
and secondary meaning photoplays wiili souls could come" ( 173 ) . He
proceeds to list select Egyptian hieroglyphics to illustrate these secondary
meanings. For example, Lindsay proposes an exercise in which one cuts
out the hieroglyphic figure from black cardboard that is white on tl1e
other side. First one gives tl1e literal mcaning, "then if he desires to rise
above the commercial field, lct him turn over each cardboard;' and there
on the white surface "write a more abstraer meaning of the hieroglyphic,
one that has a fairly elose relation to his way of thinking about the primary
form" ( 172). Here is one of his attempts: "Here is a duck: (picrurc of a
duck). Roman equivalent, tl1e lctter Z. In the motion pictures this bird, a
somewhat z-shaped animal, suggests the finality of Arcadian peace. lt is
the last and fittest ornament of thc mill-pond. Notl1ing very terrible can
happen witl1 a duck in the foreground. There is no use turning it over. It
would take Maeterlinck or Swcdcnborg to find the mystic meaning of a
duck. A duck looks tome like a caricature of an alderman" ( 174) .
Thc comparison between picntre writing and Egyptian hieroglyph and
the photoplay allows Lindsay to postulare a kind of dual signification
wherein images have botl1 literal and symbolic value. The symbolic valuc
is the privilcged value, the medium ilirough which souls speak. Johann
Caspar Lavater ( 174I-1801 ), thc Swiss and very Catl1olic physiognomist,
traced tl1e best of physiognomy to the Egyptians and claimed that their
capacit)' to read the soul through facial features was due to "the formation
and constitution of their language, which consisted of hieroglyphic representations of figures and animals." 14 Hieroglyphics serve as an example of
protofilmic commw1ication not so much because tl1ey use pictures of a
sort, but because these picntres corrcspond to primal, natural, and essential meanings that are otherwise obstructed by language. The facility to
turn basic properties of a thing or animal that are invisible and languageless into a representation dcvclopcd the Egyptians' ability to read the
59
Savage Theory
60
interna) person from his or her external appearance. "This singular emicution;' Lavater continues, "according to Tacitus, obliged them to trace
minutely the nature and properties of each before they could express their
ideas by them; and this necessity undoubtedly brought on the habit of
inquiring, which led them to their observations on human beings" ( 1: 19).
There is no direct connection from Lavater to Lindsay, but it is noteworthy that Lindsay hits upon hieroglyphics as his code to the spirit just as
Lavater had once traced physiognomy's roots to Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Hieroglyphs combine a mythos of perfected ancient civilization and the
fascination of coded secrets, still vety much alive in the imaginations of
today's schoolchildren. 15
Lindsay is interested in hieroglyphics as a pared-clown trace, one that is
free of too many representational trappings. He unremittingly uses ever
cruder forms that barely approximate a representation of a real person or
thing as the model on which to base a theory of film. For example, he suggests that a Westernized Chinese play called The Yel/Qw ]acka, which used
two flags for a chariot, a red sack for a bloody head, anda dressed-up block
of wood for a child, put "photographic realism splendidly ro rout by powerful representation." 16 What he calls "primitive representative methods"
are ripe with the potential to evoke abstraer concepts. The prin1itive, in
this case the originator of pictorial and symbolic forms of expression,
provides the key to nonliteral and hence for Lindsay artistic expression.
The rich meaning of the gesture, the animation of objects, and the symbolic nature of silent film combine to produce a form capable of retapping
the primitive core of meaning. Because of its purity, cinema has the ability
to manifest pure ideas, and as such, according to Lindsay, it can be a
higher form of artistic expression than other art forms.
The symbolic form of representation that characterizes both hieroglyphics and the photoplay is primitive beca use of its simplicity, its purity.
The photoplay is nothing short of a platonic form of expression: "This
invention, the kinetoscope, which aifects or will affect as many people as
the guns of Europe, is not yet understood in its powers, particu.larly those
of bringing back the primitive in a big rich way. The primitive is always a
new and higher beginning to the man who understands it" ( 262).
Lindsay uses the primitive to define what is most valuable both in film
production and in film reception. First contact, that is, the primal reactions to a likewise primal but technological form, drives bis study to a
First Contact
61
Glose Co11tact
cHAPTER 4
Close Contact
The gcstures of visual man are not intcndcd to convcy conccpts which can be
expressed in words, but such inncr cxperiences, such non-rational emotions
which would stiU rcmain uncxpresscd when cvcrything that can be told has
bccn rold.- Bla Balzs, Theory ofthe Film
Bla Balzs, the Hungarian intellcctual who wrote scripts, librcttos, reviews, fairy tales, and novels, wrotc three theoretical books about thc
cinema. Der Sichtbare Mensch (The Visible Man, 1924) and Der Geist des
Films (The Spirit of the Film, 1930) were translated quickly into German,
but onJy Filmkultzra ( Theory of the Film, 1948), which borrows heavily
from the formcr works, was translated into English in 1952. He was
convinced that cinema made it possible to read the souJ through the face
and the gesture. Remembering that Lavater saw physiognomy as a rollte
nor jusr ro truth, nor to thc soul, but to the divine, Balzs's deployment of
physiognomy sccularizes a method in which reading God's traces gives
access to the spiritual world. The mcanings Balzs sought, on thc other
hand, wcre thosc that were inimical to language, rhose that with rhe
ascent of the written word since "thc golden age of the visual arts" had
withered along with d1e neglecr and atrophy of the body: "The expressive
surfacc of our body was thus reduced ro the fa ce alone and this not mere! y
because the rest of the body was hidden by clothes. For d1e poor remnants
of bodily expression that remained to us the litde surface of the face
sufficcd, sticking up like a clumsy semaphore of the soul and signaling as
best it could. Sometimes a gesturc of d1e hand was added, recalling d1e
melancholy of a mutilated torso. In d1e epoch of word culture d1e souJ
learnt to speak but had grown almosr invisible."' In cinema, d1e body
communicatcs direcdy, without d1e mediation of language, says Balzs.
Bodily communication itself, he goes on to argue, was a precursor to
language. The sounds produced as the primitive or infant body contorted
to communicate were a secondary, merely "adventitious" phenomenon
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Savage Theory
64
nomic, expressive world of silent cinema. The film camera has rcvealed,
wrote Balzs, "ncw worlds until then concealed from us: such as the soul of
objects, the rhythm of crowds, the secret language of dumb things" ( 4 7).
While these elements, along with an almost religious use of physiognomy,
form the core of the book, he states here that cinema's uniqueness comes
only secondarily from the new, "other things" shown; instead, he says here
d1at the way d1ey were shown was the key innovation.
At this point in his argument, Balzs cites the new lack of distance
bet:ween the spectator and the work of art as the salient fcan1re of cinema.
Although barcly attended to in the rest of the work, Balzs gives the
concept of the "aura:' now well-known via Benjamin's "Work of Art"
essay, a slighdy different connotation. Balzs repeats d1e idea from his
1930 The Spirit ofthe Film: "In the film the permanent distance from d1e
work of art facies out of d1e consciousness of the spectator and with it the
inner distance as well, which hitherto was the experience of art" ( 48). This
loss of distance has all of the well-known effects of tactility: "Wc walk am id
crowds, ride, fly, or fall with the hero" ( 48). Balzs compounds this
tactility with "identification" to define the major element of film 's novclty:
"He [ the film character] looks into our eyes from the screen, for our cyes
are in the camera and become identical with the gaze of the characters.
They see with our eycs. Herein lies d1e psychological act of 'identification.'" M oreover, "nothing like this 'identification' has ever occurred as
the effect of any other system of art and it is here that the film manifests its
absolute artistic novclt)'" ( 48). Later on, he explains that identification is
controlled by d1e "angle and set-up;' which are what stylc is ro the narrator
of a book ( 92). Though toda y we would argue that, just as in a novel,
identification can be curtailed and even denied, his point is to register the
degree of intensity wid1 which one feels films. And there is a difference,
not only of degree, between the immediacy of walking and flying along
with the hero, which calls to mind watching something like Man With a
Movie Camera ( 1928), and "psychological identification;' which he accurately relates to realist continuity conventions. In the former, one feels on
the order of physical touch; in d1e latter, one feels a mental emotion.
Gertrud Koch has pointed to Benjamin's obvious and unacknowledged
debt to Balzs, whose Der Geist des Films, in which Balzs first formulated
this idea, appeared so me five years in advance of Benjamin's "Work of Art"
essay. 2 The debt appears to be beyond question, but the directions in
CwseOmtaa
which d1ey take this obscrvation of film's immediacy seem to me quite
differcnt. Whereas both Benjamn and Balzs are primarily concerned
with cinema's ability to present d1ings to human sensibilities in such a way
as ro circumvcm strucrured reasoning, Balzs is interested in the emotions
cinema can convey d1at are otherwise inarticulate, while Benjamn is interested in its physical touch. This difference follows the same distinction
Gunning marks out between a cinema of "attraction" and a cinema of
"absorption.'' Attraction refers to d1e form of address to d1e spectator
found in early cinema and later maintained in fragments of the musical
and the avam-garde, which "aggressively subjected the spectator ro sensual or psychological impact." Absorption, on d1e other hand, pulls d1e
spectator into d1e diegesis of the film, into its "illusory imitativeness."
Gunning borrows the term attraction from Eisenstein and emphasizes its
context: "Then as now, the 'attraction' was a term of d1e fairground, and
for Eisenstein and his friend Yuketvich it primarily reprcsented their favorite fairground attraction, the roller coaster, or as it was known then in
Russia, the American Mountains."3
Balzs's film theory just about dismisses the "cinema of attraction.'' He
places the beginning of film as art, as opposed to the photographed stage,
in America with D. W. Griffith 's use of montage, variation of depth of ficld
and camera angle, along wid1 camera movcmcnt. The rest had all been
what he calls "fairground sideshows."4 Balzs's aversion to d1e tactilc address to the spectator is borne out in his discussion ofVertov. Balzs finds
Vertov's Kino-Eye so aggressive and overpresent that he associates the
subjectivit)' of the kino-eye with Vertov himsclf. In Bal7..s's view, Vertov's
subjectivity purloins the spectator's right to see for himsclf or herself and
mrns the objectivity Balzs finds inherent in d1c naturalistically rendered
image into an extension of Vcrtov's imagination, no matter how documentary his footage originally might ha ve been ( 164-65).
Although Balzs Lauds Vertov as a filmic lyric poet, his interest in this
sort of thing is clearly superficial. Balzs's interest is in carefully crafted,
seamlessly sun1red narrativc cinema: "A good film director does not permit the spectator to loo k ata scenc at random. He lcads our eye inexorably
from dctail to dctail along thc linc ofhis montagc" ( 31).
Balzs does discuss film's ability to show crowds and landscapes, but it
was the closc-up that captivated his interest most of all. In the close-up he
found not a copy of the real thing in image form but rather such close
65
Savage Theory
66
Close Contact
67
Cwse Contact
Savage Theory
68
Film images, including those of people, are things, and all things on
celluloid are thereby reanimated and thus direcrly cxpressive.
Physiognomic readings of people, who are, after all, actors playing
emotions, rcst neverthcless on rl1e qualitics of the face chosen to rendcr
requisite emotions. Balzs relies heavily on actresses such as Asta Nielsen
and Lillian Gish, whose faces hold a complexity of sufferings, and also, 1
would contend, because they are women, and thus by nature hidc sccrets
more deftly than mcn. Nielsen's facial deftness not only allows for great
emotive power but also enablcs hcr to creare many layers of cmotions,
artfully maskcd and unmaskcd. The interplay betwecn acting and bcing on
film, between masking and umnasking, is part of the appcal of physiognomic reading as a practice. Balzs performs this sort of analysis by uncovcring veils of exprcssive fearurcs as ifhe were looking through a microscopc. Physiognomy is bascd on the bclicf that one has all the evidcnce
neccssary ro find thc truth in rl1e face itsclf, in its fcatures and thcir gcsrural
articulations of emotions. The job of an actor, however, is to manipulare
rl1osc gestures and fea tu res in thc scrvice of a meaning for a film, to create a
physiognomic map of, say, pain, love, or fcar. Thc excitcment of watching
actors work is rootcd in the fact that thc "real" tmth of rl1e actor's character is brackcted. Balzs concentrares on examples in which masking emotions and subtly changing emotions are paramount. This suggests that the
vicwcr's artful physiognomic reading is a compelling one in film spectatorship not because it offers a ready-made route to truth but because it
imolves thc spectator in an intricate process of watching, suspecting, and
unvcili ng rl1e tmth.
Physiognomy leads to an exploration of masking and urunasking in
Balzs's text. He uses an examplc of Asta Niclsen attempting to creare a
face of youth in Dirnentragodie (The Tragedy of a Whore, 1927, Gcrmany)
11
before a cracked and dull mirror for what he calls "microphysiognomy?'
In anorl1er example, Lillian Gish tries to force hcr face into a smile with
the aid of her fingers, again in front of a mirror (Broken Bwssoms, 1919,
directed by D. W. Griffitl1). By virtue of"an intangible nuance;' her "painful, even horrible mask" of a forced smile is rurned into a "real" smiling
expression. The mirror as the reflexive figure for scmtinizing the shifts
bet:ween real and mask is taken over by a silent, vigilant observer within
the frame in an example of what Balzs calls "the polyphonic play of
fearures" ( 64).
69
Samge Theory
70
Cwse Contaa
rcfer to the camcra's different perspective, it is as a process of unveiling:
"When the film close-up strips the veil of our imperceptiveness and insensitivit:y from thc hidden littlc things and shows us the face of objects, it still
shows us man, for what makes objects expressive are the human expressions projected on ro them" ( 6o). It is not the camera per se that gives us
an image free of the trappings of representation, but the process of discovery it provokes. The mechanical namre of the camera's transfer of a real
thing to thc film image on screen is oflittle concern to Balzs because he is
most concerned, it seems to me, not simply with the little detall that
features so large in his text but with things that are even harder to sce
because they lack physical form altogether: "emotions, moods, intcntions
and thoughts" ( 61). Thus he emphasizcs not the camera but the traces
these emotions and thoughts leave on the face. In this sense, says Balzs,
such reprcsentation approaches the stan1s of objectivc documentary: "The
most subjective and individual ofhuman manifestations is rendered objective in the close-up" ( 6o).
For Balzs and Lindsay, the significance of cinema carne not through its
power of tcchnological reproduction, nor from the fact that the camera
lcns brought an image unmediated by human intervention (as it did for
Benjamn, Epstein, and Bazin): Cinema's significance was du'e to the material path it beat to immaterial things. The traces of dormant and primal
emotions, of thoughts, of the spirit and the soul were reactivated through
physiognomic spectatorship, through close inspection of things that were
secretive and small ( for Balzs), and through cinema's iconic stimulation
of quasiplatonic intimations (for Lindsay).
Lindsay and Balzs approach the cinema with a marked indifference to
its reprcsentational aspect. As if captivated by a nautilus just found in the
sand, they're not interested so much in its transformation from a living
creature to a beautiful artifact, as they are in the secrets, upon inspection,
its curves and chambers hold in store.
The nautilus has a secret beyond that marked out in its shape. Though it
bears the traces of its former life, it keeps the secret of its transformation
from bcing to thing. Thc image's secret, like the secret of the commodity,
has to do with the effaced machinery of its production. And just as Marx
carne to associate this with the magical fetish, whose effectiveness was its
secret namre, so too the film image takes on this fetish character. The
transformation from live object to a dead thing to an image can be ex-
71
Savage Theory
72
plaincd; its machinery is well understood. But thc fact that iris none othcr
than a machine that scnds life back to us in such a sensatc way is not so
casily gotten over. In contrast ro Balzs and Lindsay, this paradox gave
force to the thoughts about the cinema of Jean Epstcin, Walter Benjamn,
Andr Bazin, and Siegfried Kracauer.
The thinglike status of the irnagc is tied to the mcchanical naturc of the
can1cra's transfcr of real objects to a screen image, as well as to the fatigued, distractcd condition of the modero spcctator. Taken rogether, they
creare the conditions for magic.
cHAPTER s
TheSecretLifeoftheObject
Savage Theory
74
Eisenstein draws severa! analogies between images on film and the spirit
world in his discussion of"sensual thinking." 2 Among the many examples
that show how artistic practice operares on principies similar to magic and
a primitive form of thinking that is by no means lost, are instan ces of the
part substituting for the whole, or metaphor, where they function in the
same way as homeopathic magic. 3 His iilustration from The Battleship
Potemkin ( 1925) shows how the surgeon's pince-nez substitutes for the
surgeon himself in the surgeon's final appearance much more powerfully
than his body could have done. He explains not how thc weU-known
"artistic method" of the "so-called pars pro roto" works but rather, why it
works. Belief in magic may be gane in practica! life. We no longer think,
for example, that the rooth of a bear can actually give its recipicnt the
entire live bear's strength, as primitive belief might have done. But the
very same magical belief that gave such power to things, Eisenstein argued, still obtains in the sphere of artistic representation: " lt so happcns
that this method is the most typical exan1ple of a thinking form from the
arsenal of early thought processes. At that stage we were still without the
unity of the whole and the part as we now understand it. At that stage of
non-cfferentiated thinking the part is at one and the same time also the
whole."4 The pince-nez fills the surgeon's "role and place" with a "huge
sensual-emotional increase in intensity'' so that we don't merely "rcgister
the fact that the surgeon has drowned, we emotionally react to the fact
through a definite compositional presentation of this fact" ( 133). Eisenstein is claiming the power of homeopathic magic to makc the pince-nez
into a magic object that in turn adds intensity to the reaction to the
surgeon's death. The difference between what it means to "register" and
what it means to "react;' the difference between conveying information
and eliciting an emotional effect, is not one of degree. Rather, the first
requirement of magic no less than artistic representation is that it must
do something. s
The second kind of life an object can lead, whilc not unrelated to the
theme of the magical double, bears a very different genealogy. This is
the life with which objects are endowed that are mass produccd and enter
the market as objects of exchange. They are commodities: meaningless,
empty ciphers that rapidly fill with new, fetishistic meaning. The camera
turns nature into "second nature."fi It lifts the image from the material
thing and then creates a new thing, the image. This new thing is but one of
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sult of cutting. That is to say, in thc srudio the mecha ni cal equipment has
penetratcd so deeply into reality that its pure aspcct frced from thc foreign
substance of equipment is the result of a special proccdure, namely, the
shooting by the specially adjusted camera and the mounting of the shot
together with othcr similar ones. Thc cquipment-frec aspect of rcality here
has bccome the height of artifice; the sight of immediate reality has become an orchid in the land of technology."8 If one understands cinema as
the preeminent form of second nature, wrought by the alien machine, the
question for a redemptive theory of film becomes what possible ways
second narure can induce transformative meaning rather than merely perperuate reification and further mystification. Epstein's wish, cited at the
beginning of this chapter, the wish to "understand the livcs of objecrs:'
registers both kinds of lives the object might lcad in d1e cinema: as a
commodity andas a religious fetish. These are the object's transformations
through the cinema d1at the alicn machine, the camera, was to releasc.
Kenned1 Anger's Scorpio Rising ( 1 962-64) is an extreme example of the
transformative potential in the commodity wherein d1e commodity form
itself almost narrares the film. Beyond mere reification, but stiil short of
utopa, the objects in Scorpw Rising illustrate thc object life of the commodity fetish, the ritual object, the religious fetish, and, most important,
the transformative meaning that Benjamn belicved should be wrought
from such fetishes in modern representational practiccs.
In defining d1e commodity stams of d1is particular film, we must bear in
mind that all films are simulacra, copies of degraded icons. Though there
is no original, the film, by dcfinition, is nonethelcss a copy, a reasscmblage
consisting of light, celluloid, a blank screen, speakers, and a ( paying)
audience. The aud1entic object never existed in cinema. "From a photographic negative, for example, onc can malee any number of prints; to ask
for the 'authentic' print malees no sen se," wrote Benjamn ( 224). But, as
Baudrillard has pointed out, the simulacrum delivers an aura of reality far
more effective than the original. 9 A Salcm cigarette advertisement, for
example, caUs up an ur-image of freshness, mountains, and snow wintergreen free of telephone lines, sludge, runny noses, and smoker's cough.
When Benjamn described the magical independence of the image from its
apparants and noted the artful absence of all the can1eras and lights from
the final product, he used the image of a carefully cultivated, rare flower,
not a daylily, to describe d1e effect of d1e transformation from reality to
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78
Gogh's well-worn boots had done ( 1 38-39). Well past Lukcs's requisite
saturation point, described in History and Class Conscioumess, we are also
beyond simple reification. In our late-night capitalism, the commodity
seems to be emitting a radioactive glow, the shimmering attraction of the
fetish's power.
Scorpio Rising's first sequence centers on a motorcycle, a song, and a
man, alone toged1er in a clean, sparse garage. The motorcycle shines to rl1e
peals of the simple and proud melody "Fools Rush in Wherc Angels Fear
to Tread" that accompanies the camera, which spodights the bike from
above as if to track a star's walk up a stagc ramp for an Academy Award.
The guy is working on the bike, but more than that, he's watching it,
kneeling by it, loving it. He doesn't !ove it as much as the camera does,
however, following its cvery curve, licking it with light to polish the
fenders for a brilliant showroom sheen. This is intercut wid1 shots of
windup plastic motorbikes, 'sos paraphernalia of all sorts, pinups of MarIon Brando, James Dean, live shots of macho men flexing their smooth
muscles, dressing, and grooming rl1emselves. A series of 'sos and carly '6os
rock-and-roll hits provide a disjointed narration to the film, with ballads
of youth, death, and !ove religiously left to play out all their verses.
Like the commodities, the songs too have a formal narrative quality
quite apart from the simple stories they tell. The songs have very strong
melodies, often sw1g by multiple voiccs in unison. Melody is narrative
itself in d1is instance, directing the flow of the film with an easy but
forceful rhythm. A song's incongruous or ironic textual relation to d1e
images on screen is overcome by rl1e earnestness of the sound. Anger
capitalizes on d1e pleasure of the melody ( analogous to the comfort of
narrati ve), the appeal of d1e stories within the songs ( the fact that they
progress from beginning to middle to end regardlcss of the particular
content of the story), as well as the ambiguous textual relation of the
words to the images on screen. Also, d1ey are recognizablc as cultural
commodities; the film glows in the glitter of kitsch value that mey now
evoke. Viewing d1e film sorne thirty ycars aftcr it was made, it is difficult to
remove the new !ayer of nostalgia of these songs, that then were contemporary with the film, but he clearly intended to draw on their value as
popular bits. Carel Rowe points to the problem that in later receptions,
the film took on the vacuous qualities of nostalgia, which, Rowe maintains, "originally served as a critique against idolatry and romanticism," in
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important social effects probably escaped him. It consists in thc charm displayed by addicts under the inAuence of drugs. Commoditics derive the
same effect from thc crowd that surges around and intoxicares thcm." 14
And of the proletariat's relationship to commodities he wrote: "If it
wanted to achieve virmosity in this kind of enjoymcnt, it could not spurn
cmpathizing with commodities. lt had to enjoy this idcntification with all
the plcasure and the uneasiness which derived from a presentiment of its
own destiny as a class. Finally, it had to approach this destiny with a
sensitivity that perceives charm even in damagcd and decaying goods"
(59). In his "Arcad es Projcct;' Benjamn described the coUcctions of recen ti y out-of-date objects displayed in thc glass cases of the Pars arcades as
"dream-imagcs of the coUective;' which were both, according to Susan
Buck-Morss, "distorting illusion and rcdecmablc wish-image;' and so
took on a political meaning. 15 Anger's parading of thcsc commodities
conflates sexual with consumer scduction in a way similar to that which
developed with tl1e department store in Pars of the 1 8sos. Of tl1is development Buck-Morss writes, "If commodities had first promised to
fulfill human desires, now they created them: drcams tl1cmselves became
commodities." 16 No longer mercly supplying goods for sale, "the use of
display techniques and eye-catching design which dcvcloped rapidly over
tl1e next decades supplanted the commercial principie of supply with consumer seduction. As reification of desire, commoditics gcnerated dreams
rathcr than satisfied them" ( 72). The display of objects and models in
Scorpio Rising movcs us farther, not only away from thc utility of things
( narrative or otl1erwise) but bcyond commodity fetishism; Anger's displays become collective dream images.
The film proudly displays posters of maJe stars. Images of rebcllious
manhood become icons for the gay coUectivc. They are not interested in
the "aura of the person but the 'spell of the personaliry; the phony spell of
a commodity!' 17 This spell of the commodity conjurcd up in Scorpio Rising
is a magical way of being embraced by a hostilc culmre, one tl1at, in its
heterosexual hegemony of the early '6os, would not even ha ve acknowledged gay culture. Warming themselves by tl1c hcarth-fire cinders of what
was once use value, the answer to society's scorn is to steal me "aura" of its
mings, to make tl1e dominant societ)"s commodities the metanarrative of
gay culmre. Hence, the ritual of tomtrc is interspersed wim segments
from a film version of one of Wcstern culmrc's strongest narratives, The
Great Code, which, in its commodity form as film, knits together tl1e shot
seguence. 18 This, it seems tome, is a radical form of play. 19
What I would call objectl1ood, or a filmic language that insists on an
extreme integrity of objects and valorizcs t11em aesthetically, is me final
kind of object life to consider in tl1is chapter. Roben Bresson's Z::At;gent
( 1983, Switzerland/ France) is a film of muted subjects and lively objects.
Bresson's rationalizing shooting style, his direction of actors so as to appear as affectless automatons, and me visual richness of his film images
serve to impart animistic significance to me film's visual tableam:. The
central character, Yvon, who is at this point in the film a small-time thief,
remrns to his home demoralizcd and defeated from a court tria!. Slowly,
he opens me door just enough to reveal a generous cluster of brilliant
orange carrots on the living room tablc. Raw food! Use val ue, as opposed
to surface, exchange value if there ever was such a thing. But, as Bresson
films tl1e carrots not in the kitchcn but where ornaments are usually displayed, they become a stunning if momentary stilllife, not edible nourishment. Though objects do havc narrative functions, Bresson in this shot
betrays an adoration of the object for its own sake. Not spirit, not symbol
nor food, mey are but pure matter. Brcsson wrote, "Make the objects look
as if they want to be there."20 This still life of warm color insists on
its presence.
This aspcct of the object can be scen as the detail with an allegorical
vocation, distinguished by its "oversignification" (Baudrillard), which
Naomi Schor says "is not a matter of realism, but of surrealism, if not
hyperrealism." It is a "disproportionatcly enlarged ornamental detail;
bearing me sea! of transcendence, it testifies to the loss of all transcendental signifieds in the modern period. In short, the modern allegorical detail
is a parody of the traditional theological dctail. It is tl1e detail deserted by
God."21 The phantom detail, "the detail dcscrtcd by God" no longer transccndent, is distinguishcd by Schor for its excessive materiality. This detail
dcserted by God has characteristics similar to me pidgin fetisso or Pormguese fetifO, a term the Portugucse used to describe, in a colonial context, the adoration of certain objects in West A.frica. The Portuguese believcd mat the Africans had endowed certain objects with godly power
and then cut off recognition of those gods, mat mey'd forgotten mose
gods. Still, the Portuguese maintained, me West Africans believed that life
was contained within those objects, but only me Portuguese, wim their
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premise that the West Mricans had forgotten rl1ose gods, knew why. Only
they could see the West Mricans' fetishization of d1c objccts.
In "The Problem of the Fetish:' Willian1 Pictz sces our current understanding of fetishism as a colonial constmct, which crrcd when ir followed
this Porruguese interpretation. The fetish, he contends, in the Mrican
context is always, first of al!, a material thing; ir is not transcendent. It
has an origin, a hisrory that fixes rogether events that are otherwise incongruous. lts power and its identity come from its ability to repeat both
thc form of that historicalunity and its effect in another siruation. Its effect
depends on a past ser of social relations, now forgotten, but whose power
has accmed in the material fetish. The fetish's control is external; ir can't be
manipulated by people because its powcr comes from d1e very effacement
of its origins in historical social relations. 22
Pietz's correction ro the Western undcrstanding of fetishism insists on
the matcriality of d1e fetish, as opposed to its being undersrood as a
transcendental force. The fetish physically holds relationships and history
that cannot be rccovered. This insight provides a way of understanding
rl1e brilliant objectness of things often found in films whose characters
have a dulled or muted subjectivity. Things have the vibrance that the
characters do not possess. Douglas Sirk's objects in Written 011 the Wind
( 1956) stand out in this way. When Lauren Bacall opens her gifted closet,
the outfits and their matching shoes neady aligned below them shin1mer
such that she is almost frightened. The brilliant yellow sports car that
begins the melodrama operares as an establishing shot for Robert Stack's
poor rich boy's human vacancy. The most absurdly brilliant fetishes appear in Sirk's Imitation ofLije ( r 959). The living room of d1e now successful actress (played by Lana Turner) is dominated by a three-foot-long
multicolored clay fish that is shifted about the room by various characters
each time a scene is enacted there.
Yvon's carrots, Lana's fish, and Lauren's shoes are visual props. They are
details of material value. Yet iris almost impossible for a thing on film to
be a thing in itself. For al! of their visual bri!liance, d1ey seem to scream
repressed emotions. Thomas Elsaesser reports on Sirk's remarks regarding
the colors in Written on the Wind: ''Almost throughout the picture I used
deep-focus lenses which have the effect of giving a harshness to the objects
and a kind of enameled, hard surface ro the colours. I wanred this ro bring
out the inner violence, the energy of the characters which is all inside them
83
cHAPTER &
The bclicf that things take on lifc, mcanings that are otherwisc lost to
hwnan experience vi a lapses of memory, the passage of time, the stampede
of progress, or the reifying structures of capitalism, plays a crucial role in
the early theorization and practices of cinema. This chapter discusses the
role of the camera as a representational apparatus and as a thing that is
itsclf a subject of fetishization in the creation of a magical, phantasmagoric cinema.
The most basic and of course most magical feat of cinema is to render
lifclike what is, after all, mercly light and shadow, without volume, and,
early on, even lacked synchronized sound and often lacked color: "The
cinema names things, though in a visual way, and as a spectator, I do not
for a second doubt that they exist. All this drama, all this !ove are but light
and shadow. A square of white cloth, the only material element is all that's
needed to reflect all the photogenic substance with such intensity. 1 see
what is not and 1 see this unreal thing exactly." 1
Cinema's capacity to let the viewer "see what is not ... this unreal thing
exactly:' of bringing that image of the absence of objects to life is ftmdamental to its enchantment. It is also, as Tom Gunning reveals in his discussion of spirit photography, "uncanny." Photography is a medium that
offers a "second glimpse ... more sinister than the first'' because of its
capacity to repeat, to double. Gwming argues, "While both Freud and
Rank demonstrate that the double has a long lineage ( from archaic beliefs
in detachablc souls to the romantic Doppelganger), that predates photography, nonetheless photography furnished a technology which could
summon up an uncanny visual experience of doubling as much as it was
capable of representing facts in aJI their positivity and uniqueness.''2 Spirits
of the dead, for example, could use existing photographs of themselves as
modcls to remind them of how they had looked, such that in sorne instances tl1ese images could occupy a place in photographs of those loved
ones who were still very much alive. The indexical quality of photography,
that it partakes in some way of the original, far from establishing "material
certainty with apodictic clarity;' released further phantasms whose "very
fascination carne from their apparent impossibility, their apparent severance from tl1e laws of nature" ( 68).
A remnant of tl1e enchantment by the uncanny double, which Epstein
describes but to which through habit audiences are all but inured, can be
recognized in films tl1at anmate objects within diegesis that otherwise
obey basic physicallaws. Norman Z. McLeod's Topper ( 1937), for example, is a screwball comedy in which two rich, carefree socialites die and
become ghosts when they smash into a tree while driving home from a
wild evening's escapades. While they are adjusting to their transformation, two drunkards are sitting on a distant log, sharing a bottle. The
drunkards watch in amazement as the invisible ghosts move the whecl and
jack to change their roadster's tire. The scene animares diegetically real
things and tempts physical laws of causality. The two drunks, sufficiently
primitivized by their consumption of firewater to believe that the laws of
gravity are being violated in front of their eyes, are still attached enough to
the laws of causality to know that everything is not as it should be. The
scene initiates the dnmken giddiness that ensues in increasingly tmcontrolled doses during tl1e film, until tl1e ghosts' final ballroom bash where
they invisibly hurl cocktails and make mayhem for a large, upscale audience and the scene becomes so over-the-top that tl1e authorities are
called in.
Outcasts from the film's plot, the dnmken observers, who are the first
observers of the ghosts' invisible movements of tl1e props, mark the periphery of the film, the linc between viewer and film, between reality and
make-believe. They don't know it's only a movie; the viewer, on the otl1er
hand, knows better. The figure of the drunk is also a sort of wedge, casing
open, albeit in a containablc way, a porthole for the fantastical and the
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into the land of the living, these crossings momentarily activare a sensor
between spirit and Aesh, which sends out tantalizing jolts with each
violation.
Cinema gains its magical quality from more than its paradoxical autonomy alone. The particular magic of making dimensionless things flush
with the ability ro activare the senses happens by virtue of t\vo interdependent qualities. The first is the mechanical aspect of the camera, while on
the audience's side brews what Jean Epstein termed a society in a state of
"fatigue:' or "distraction:' as Kracauer and Benjan1in put it. The unscrupulous, willful "camera-machine" takes advantage of the distracted, fatigued
modern audience, catches them unawares, and makes things come alive.
The camera is, first of all, a machine. As such, it was a prime example of
the alienating nature of modern production. At the same time, its images'
mechanical movements at times mimicked the situation in the workplace
and in that way addressed the audience's distracted perception. In Siegfried Kracauer's 1927 essay, "The Mass Ornamenr:' the objectifying nature
of assembly-line production is reproduced in popular spectacle. 12 The
mass ornament removes the last vestiges of namral meaning and produces
a spectacle ripe with surface splendor. 13 The legs of the Tiller Girls are
no longcr attached to bodies, but replicare the reifying structures of capitalist production: "The hands of the factories correspond to the legs of
the Tiller Girls." 14 When Kracauer refers ro the Tiller Girls he is referring to militarily trained dancing girls named after their choreographer,
John Tiller, who were immenscly popular throughout Europe. 15 Bertolt
Brecht, too, while drinking a cup of coffee in New York City, was captivatcd by thc "surface splendor" of cabaret dancing girls: "After enjoying
black coffce I can look more tolerantly at concrete buildings.. .. I belicve: surface has a great future .... I'm glad tl1at in cabarets dancing girls
are being manufactured to resemble each othcr more. lt's plcasant that
there are so many of them and that they're interchangeable." 16
Kracauer docs not directly refer to the film can1era and tl1e image it
produces in the essay on the mass ornament, but the idea that the cameramachinc is the vehicle for "the aesthetic reAex of tl1e rationality to which
the prevailing economic system aspires" is central ro his argument. 17
Taken rogetl1cr witl1 his essay, "Cult ofDistraction:' in which the "surface
splcndor" ( 323) is produced by the camera, cinema becomes the chosen
art form tl1at can produce a likeness in which society can examine itself.
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due to the fact that "capitalism rationalizes not too much but too little:'
certainly Lukcs could offer a similar rejoinder to the effect that tl1e reification of society remains incomplete. "The Mass Ornan1ent'' and the reification essay share a profound sense of a society on the brink of consciousness
of itself on the one hand, or absorption into reification's voracious machncry on the other. A condition that, if one is to gauge by today's writings on
popular culture, has not changed all that much. The mass ornan1ent still
aptly describes a cinematic mode of address, an aspect of the apparatus,
however unfulfilled .Kracauer's utopian schema may now appear.
As muchas me camera has been claimed to be an (ideological) apparatus,26 and films are thought to be carefully manipulated by artists or socially constructed according to ideas ofhow things should look, for classical film theory, the camera's power was, time and again, accounted for by
its alen, nonhuman, mechanical sensibility.
The alen quality of tl1e camera does not lie in its status as a machine for
the mass production of images alone. Along with mcchanization, the
camera brings with it the objectivity over which the human hand had cast
such "doubt''27 as well as a too! for seeing that is simply better than the
human eye.
As a mechanism for making an impression of objcctive reality, the lens
mere! y is itself. Its nature, or rather, the nature of the images it hands over,
is still, however, enigmatic. Andr Bazin's "Ontology of me Photographic
Image" ( 1945) confirms the subjective power of its objectivity, and also
uncovcrs a furmer reason why cinema's mimetic power has such unequaled sway in relationship to other art forms.
Bazin credits the camera with a haunting objectivity but adds that this
answers a specific need in human aesthetics: "the appetite for illusion."
"No matter how skillful the painter;' writes Bazin, "his work was always in
fee to an inescapable subjectivity. The fact that a human hand intervened
cast a shadow of doubt over the image. Again, tl1e essential factor in the
transition from the baroque to photography is not the perfecting of a
physical process ... rather does it lie in a psychological fact, to wit, in
completely satisfying our appetite for illusion by a mechanical reproduction in the making of which man plays no part'' ( 12). "Thc need for
illusion" is a given element in the composition of tl1e hun1an mind. "It is
purely a mental need, of itself nonaesthetic, me origins of which must be
sought in me proclivity of the mind towards magic" ( 1 1). In the course of
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sixries and sevcntics, who put the gesture and thc face in a new, intimare
register, and of Sran Brakhage, who, beginning in the fifties, expanded
what it mcant to scc. Such indepcndcnt filnunaking givcs full valuc to
whar Epstein termed "thc indcpcndcnt cyc" in bis critique of thc point-ofvicw shot: "But I do not mean to imply, as it was recently the fashion to
state, that each image of the film should be conceived as seen by one of the
characters in a preceding shot. Subjectivism likc this is overdone. Why
refuse t0 profit by one of the rarest qualities of tl1c cinema tic eye, that of
being an eye independent ofthe eye, ofescaping the tyrmmical egocmtrism ofour
personal vision? Why compel the sensitive emulsion simply to duplicare tl1e
functions of our own retina? Why not grasp eagcrly atan almost unigue
opportunity to ser a scene from a focus other than our own line of sight?
The lens is itself. " 35
The lcns has a subjectivity of its own. However undefinable and unknowable the metal brain may be, "the lens is itsdf." The lcns itself scems
caught in the never-ending spiral twisting people inro tl1ings and tl1ings
into peoplc. Terms that cnliven the camera eye with human attributes are
not even confined ro the filming machine but extend ro the filmstrip as
well, which is too often tyrannically compelled ro function as if it were a
mere retina in mainstream film practice. In Benjamin's, Epstein's, and
Bazin's manner of wriring about the lens, with its gentlc lowerings and
liftings, its sensate emulsions, its virginallove, iris hardly artless. For Benjamin and Epstein ir was even aggressive. Yet, at the same time thcy claim
that ir is its objective nature, its passivity, that gives it such artful power.
The lens has the guile of an ingenue, rhe emorions of an execurioner.
The camera is an image-producing machine, a thing. lt is not exempt
from the phantasmagoric transformations of capiralism Marx described,
bur rather, ir too becomes animated by fetishism and by the theoretical
process of naming. Naming, recalling Epstein, is animisric: "The cinema
na.mcs things, although in a visual way."36 This naming is the same kind of
naming that defines language: "Moreover cinema is a language, and like
alllanguages it is animistic; it attributes, in other words, a semblance of
life ro the objects it defines."3 7 Just as cinema animares by naming things,
naming, albeit in the hope of definition, animares the carnera lens, the
filmstrip, and the images they produce. Most gcnerally, the camera becomes such a powerful thing because the fascination it attracts is animated
by thc primitive, archaic desire for a direct copy. By defining the camera as
95
cHAPTER 7
A road is a road but the ground which flees undcr the four beating hearts of
an automobile's belly transports me. The Oberland and Scmmcring nmnels
swallow me up, and my head, bursting through the roof, hits against their
vaults. Seasickness is decidedly pleasant.- ]can Epstein, "Magnification and
Other Writings"
The alien, mechanical nature of the camera highlights the object as discrete from human production and thus thrusts its image into a world of
magical significance. At the same time, the mechanization of daily life, and
of work in particular, changed the cognitive condition of the perception of
the metamorphosing object. The ditferent nan1re of these changes, 1 even
their significance, 2 is now a subject for debate, but Epstein, Benjamn, and
Kracauer granted them no small importance in the 192os. The changes in
thc narurc of cxperience brought on by what we looscly call modcrnity3
were found not only in its forms of representation - the waning, for exan1ple, of the art of storytelling, and the ascent of the novel- but also, and
most important, they were then understood to creare a ditferent, less
broad kind of attention paid to those representations.
And indeed, in 1921, Jean Epstein dcclared his world in a state of
fatigue, but that fatigue, he claimed, was an achievement: "We are all
erudite and professional scholars of fatigue, neurasthenic esthetes."4 According to Smart Liebman, Epstein believed that modern society, via its
whirring machines, and the changing nature oflabor, produced an inability to contcmplate and to focus on something for a long period of time.
"Epstein's central premise;' writes Liebman, "was that machines had drastically changcd the nature of work. Manual labor was fast becoming the
exccption rathcr than the rule. Even where physical labor was still required, machines intervcned to augment the power of workers." 5 Liebman
cites Epstcin's observation that, "In countless jobs, thc arm, the hand, the
shouldcr, and the foot havc been replaced by an electrical current, some
gears and pullies."6 "Ever increasing numbers of jobs;' Liebman summarizes, "were strictly 'whitc collar; and even 'blue collar' occupations had
come ro dcpcnd upon the mastery of tl1e complcx conceptual systems
requircd to operare the new mechanical tools. Work was becoming 'cerebral.' " 7 Modcrn labor made not just aural and visual bur mental noise.
In tl1e light of this dispersion of cognitive capabilities, Epstein saw his
opening. Liebman writes, "Machines, fatigue, and the subconscious cognition they brought to prominence were tl1e principal fearures of a future
Epstein looked forward to optimistically" ( 140). Epstein's optimism !ay
in his belief that fatigue atforded a ncw kind of pcrception, a sort of
haphazard apprehension that allowcd thc world to touch one unmediated
by strucrured reasoning. It is easy to recognize the wear of fatigue, but the
cnthusiasm, as Liebman indicares, which became Epstein's impassioned
argumcnt for film, rcquires a greater leap. Here is his translation of a
passagc from Epstein's La Poesie:
l wonder whethcr manis not more intdligcnt whcn his overburdened intellect
is cxpcriencing shocks, interruptions and failurcs; [ l wonder] whether thc
wholc of civilization in which wc live such complicatcd and active livcs isn't
the product of accumulatcd fatigue, of incremental mental strain .... We
endure this fatigue almost continuously and are impaircd by it. Ccrtainly,
sometimes it is diminishing, but not always. In other rcspccts, it is enhancing
and pcrhaps . .. that is why it intcrests me. Without it, one's intellect would
hardly cvcr cxpericncc moments of genius, of sudden Aashcs of understanding
of cxtraordinary scopc, of incandescent lyricism, of victorious reason. Without
fatigue, man and civilization would be deprivcd of all this; civilization would
no longcr be what it is. ( r 8 t - 8 3)
Thc ctfect of fatigue on people bccame, for Epstein, the cause of moments of genius and of victorious reason. In connecting the narure of
labor with the nantre of creative activity, Epstein of course was not alonc.
When Walter Benjamn wrote about the decline of tl1e art of storytelling,
for cxamplc ( and experience losing ground to reprcsentation), he notcd
that one told stories while doing artisanal work: "This process of assimilation [ of a story] which takes place in deptl1, requires a state of relaxation
which is becoming rarcr and rarer. If sleep is the apogee of physical relaxation, boredom is tl1e apogee of mental rclaxation. Boredom is thc dream
bird tl1at hatches tl1e egg of experience. A rustling in the !caves drives him
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away. His nesting place - the activities tbat are intimately associated with
boredom - are already extinct in the cities and are declining in tbe country
as well.... [Storytelling] is lost because there is no more weaving and
spinning to go on while they are being listened to."8 The nature of mechanicallabor, the noise of its machines and the rapid repetitive tasks, had
made not only storytelling but also the state of boredom, wbicb bad filled
the idle mind, impossiblc. The tasks of the industriallaborer and office
worker alike render boredom a thing of the past. Kracauer points to mucb
the sarne thing in his essay "Boredom;' in which he claimed that boredom
had become clase to impossible. 9
To conjure a moment wherein "incandescent lyricism" is brought on by
labor's fatigue, by " incremental mental strain;' in contrast to thc untormented guality of borcdom which brings understandings that are readily
assimilable to experience, reguires acknowledging that fatigue is incvitably tied to repression, loss, or despair. 10 Bcnjan1in's image of boredom as
"the drearn bird which hatches the egg of experience;' and Epstcin's theoretically quite differcnt image of a fatigued laborer turning out epiphanies
on the assembly line nonetheless both call cartoons to mind. An cxample
to suit Epstein's lyrical fatigue can be found in a different form of visual
comic animation. Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times ( 1936) portrays factory
work in all its viscous cffccts on the soul. Chaplin's every move is timed,
regulated, and determined by the conveyer bclt as he tightens bolts on an
assembly line with a guick turn of each wrist. Holding a wrench in each
hand, this repetition finally stirs him into such a hypnotic frenzy that the
motion of tightening bolts, two at a time, overtakes him and he throws
himself into the factory's gargantuan machincry, only to be spit out again
still tightening imaginary bolts as he traverscs the shop room floor to
the sidewalk outside, the wrenches still in hand. He performs an instant
graphic match of imagined bolts to a woman's real dress buttons on hcr
busde and ends up paying for the incongmity by being taken away in a
straitjacket. The animation of the object that is produced by shop room
fatigue falls short of incandescent lyricism but approximates a moment of
genius, however comic. Chaplin's screen performance served for Epstein
as a clear demonstration of the creativc cffccts of fatigue: "Chaplin has
created the overwrought hero. His entire performance consists of reflexes
of a nervous, ti red person. A bell oran automobilc horn makes him jump,
forces him to stand anxiously, has hand on bis chest, because of the ner-
vous palpitations of bis heart. This isn't so much an examplc, but rather a
synopsis of bis photogenic neurasthenia?' 11 The basic form of Chaplin's
representation of repetitive labor mn arnok through distraction from thc
task to the object is a familiar comic routine in films. But such comic
heroes also bear out Lukcs's observation that in capitalist production,
one only has a soul when one makes a mistake. 12
A more obvious fit to Epstein's description of fatigue is not the assembly
line worker but, to the contrary, a writer, who, so exhausted by cxperience,
and cven more so by its memory, so sick as to spend bis productive years
literally lying down, always fatigued or in fear of absolute collapsc, holds
death at bay to witness a chance significant detail that then releases into a
full mca11ing-laden imagc. The animation of the object rl1at could bring
forth mcaning depended, for Proust, on chancc 011 the one hand, and
guieting thc present 011 thc od1cr: "The past is hidden somewherc outside
the real m, bcyond the reach of intcllect, in some material object (in the
sensation which that material objcct will give us) which we do not suspect.
And as for that object, it depends on chance whethcr we come upon it or
not befare wc ourselves must dic." 13 Proust, however, organized the col1ditions of bis writing so that "chance" had cvery oppommity. Walter
Benjamn describes the conditions of Proust's writing as "extremcly unhealrl1y: an unusual malady, extraordinary weald1, and an abnormal disposition."14 Benjarnin's interprctation of Proust's method attempts to
show that concentration is inimical to free recollection through images
and sensation. Light and reason can undo a hard night's work: "thc day
unravels what the night has woven" ( 202). Finally, Proust confined himsclf to the evening's liminal state: "Wid1 our purposcful activity and, cvcn
more, our purposivc rcmcmbering cach day unravcls rl1e web and the
ornan1cnts of forgetting. That is why Proust finally turned bis days into
nights, devoting all his hours to undisturbed work in bis darkened room
with artificial illumination, so that 11one of those intricate arabesqucs
might escape him" ( 202). Still, quict, and dark. Such are thc conditions for
the chance perception of an important imagc. Tired but not sleeping,
Proust recoilcd from the light, "bcyond the reach of intellcct;' so as to
stumble upon a sensate recovery of the past through a material object.
"Suddcn flashcs of undcrstanding" or "incandesccnt lyricism" flood Remembmnce ofThings Past through gates impervious to rcason, but rathcr
wedged asunder by the material detritus tin1e leavcs in its wake. Imagcs
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that anmate the imagination beyond the reach of reason, like Proust's
"fetiches" 15 and Chaplin's bolts to buttons, rescue the fatigued laborer
from modern times.
That modernity brought about a change in perception is by now a fairly
familiar claim which perhaps gained most currency with the many readings of Benjamin's "Work of Art" essay as the "optical unconscious" and,
toa lesser degree, Kracauer's concept of distraction. 16 From Vachcl Lindsay's mechanically inclined Americans, so fond of crawling on their backs
to tinker with their motor cars of a Samrday afternoon, to Kracauer's "Litde Shopgirls:'17 one's distractions in leisure time and the nature of one's
daily experience, especiaiiy labor, are all of a piece. Although Epstein's
observations were hardiy novel, he went much furtl1er than Kracauer and
Benjan1in, for modern conditions not only changed perception, in his
view; he claimed that the cinema, in particular, created the conditions for
a modern creative practice.
The nature of one's daily experience and labor was so fragmented and
confounding that the camera, which could function in a likewise fragmented fashion, was a good too! for its representation. But in order for the
camera to so serve, "realist aesthetics" had to be abandoned. "Reality:'
writes Liebman, was for Epstein "too fast and volatile ro be adequately
conveyed by a realist aestl1etic." Liebman then recalls Epstein's citation of
Blaise Cendrars, the writer, actor, sailor, animal coiiector, who had a deep
influence on Epstein. "Whirlpools of movements in space. Everything
mmbles. The sun plummets and we after it.... Today everything opens,
crumbles, melts, is hollowed out, constructed, expands. A new civilization. A new humanity.... And it's tl1e machine that recreares and displaces our sense of orientation. Directions change. From this point of
view tl1en, the cinema, arbitrarily, has endowed man with an eye more
marvelous than tl1e faceted eye of a fly. One hundred worids, a thousand
movements, a million dranus enter the field of this eye simultaneously." 18
The can1era matches the disorientation inherent in modern experience,
illustrated here by the machine, shot for shot. And, like a fly whose multifaceted eye sees different angles simultaneously, a person, botl1 while spectator in a film and living in the modern world, no longer has the time, nor
the quiet, for contemplation's boredom.
Reminiscent of Epstein's fly, Benjamn describes tl1e "jerky nearness" of
the film image. The foiiowing passage from One Way Street, a series of
('
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tor who is intcrcstcd in thc price thc artwork will bring is superior to the
critic's gazc bccause the collector is attracted ro thc art:work's commodity
value; he or she fecls its warmth.
Pcrccption of these bodily felt represcntations is no longer a matter of
reading signs: "The warmth of the subject is communicated to him [ the
paid critic], stirs sentient springs. What, in the cnd, makcs advertisements
so superior to criticism? Not what the red neon sign says- but the fiery
pool reflecting it in the asphalt?'21 Finally, Benjamn sees no sign at all on
the billboard but instead turns his attention ro its light's red reflection.
The glow cmittcd by thc fetish, like the commodity's warmth, draws the
modcrn spectator ncar. In his or her distraction, thc spectator is overwhclmcd by this visual, tactile force.
Benjamn was not the only one to compare this new kind of physical
apperccption to thc billboard advertisement. It is unlikely Kracaucr had
glanccd at One Way Street, which Benjamn sent to him for publication in
thc Frankfurter Zeitung, 22 before he wrotc "Borcdom" in N ovember 1 924,
but thc similarity of the images suggests somc cross-fcrtilization (332).
The anide discusscs the decay of boredom, and how the visual and aural
noise of the modern world prevents such pleasant empty-headedness. He
suggcsts that even though one may desire the blankness of real boredom,
"the world itself is much too interested for one to find the peace and quiet
necessary" ( 332). Kracauer's language suggests the same sort of active pull
of the person toward the physical world of mass reproduction that Benjamn saw in commodities: "Illuminated words glide by on the rooftops,
and already one is banished from one's own emptiness into the alien
advertisement. One's body takes root in the asphalt, and, together with
the enlightening revelations of the illuminations, one's spirit - which is
no longer one's own- roams ceaselessly out of thc night and into the
night ... . Like Pegasus prancing on a carousel, this spirit must run in
circles and may never tire of praising to high heavcn the glory of a liqueur
and the merits of the bcst five-cent cigarette. Some sort of magic spurs that
spirit rclcntlessly amid the thousand electric bulbs, out of which it constitutes and reconstitutes itself into glittering sentences" ( 332). Though
one's feet are firmly "root[ ed] in the asphalt," thc "spirit must run in
circles" and, like Pegasus, takes up the overwhelmingly proportioned
commodity. Like Benjamn, Kracauer's gazc finally rests on the glitter of
the flashing sign. But here, unlike Benjamn, Kracauer appears to be an
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tion, is the understanding that cinema partakes of both sorts of perception. Recall that Epstein wrote he'd "never seen an entire minute of pure
photogenie;' that it was "like a spark that appears in fits and starts" (9).
When Epstein derides film conventions, such as point-of-view shot, or the
"realist aesthetic;' he tmderscores what is new, specific, and most responsive to the modero world abmtt the camera. At the same time, however,
this specifically modero form, under eminently modero conditions, was
the archaic vehicle for magical power.
Epstein left Pars for Brinany in r928 and began the third and last period
of his career making films involving fishing village life and the sea. The
films he made are perhaps closer to an ideal of etlmographic cinema than
ha ve ever been made, but tl1at was not his concero. The last of these films
m ade u pon his returo after the war is Le Tempestaire ( 1947-48). It was his
first to use slow-motion sound and, consistent with his early anention to
magnification, it also employed slow and reverse motion. Recapitulating
his enthusiasm for the camera close-up where one can see the minute gesnlres that language leaves siknt, Epstein wrote of his new use of sound:
"In drawing out the detail, in separating the sounds, in creating a sort of
close-up of the sound, slow-motion can alJow all beings, all objects to
speak. And so that misunderstanding of the latinists, which made Lucretius say that objects cry, becomes an audible reality." 24
Le Tempestaire is the story of a fishing village during a storm, and the
fears of a woman for her husband's life as tl1e storm motmts. Finally, she
gives in to her fears and goes to a shop in which the keeper pulls clown
from me shclf a crystal ball. They look into it together and see the sea. The
entire frame is filled wim the sea, which slows clown, stops, calms, and
re beis again. 25 Her husband, we infer from the momentary relaxation of
the tempest, will be safe. The crystal ball sees as the camera does, but it is
the camera-machine that stops the sea. With the worried eyes of the wife
and confident eyes of the shopkeeper fixed on the crystal balJ, the crystal
ball hands its magic over to the camera.
In r 921, when describing tl1e "drama of tl1e microscope;' which is
movement in close-up, Epstein had described tl1is scene with uncanny
precision: "Young girls will consult mem [drama tic microscopes] instead
of the fortune telier."26 The fornme-teller's signature tool for divination,
me crystal ball beco mes infused wim the magical powers of the camera. As
in the pivotal sequence where eyes were transfixed by tl1e cream separator
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wrotc of the gramophone, anothcr tcchnological mechanism for rcproduction, "The gran1ophone is a failurc, or yet to be cxplored. One would
have to find out what it distorrs, whcre it selects. Has anyone made recordings of street noiscs, engines, railway concourscs?"30 By pointing out
whcrc cinema distorts and selects, and by explicitly connecting mis to
perception, Epstein cases me way for a finer interprctation of Benjamin's
essay man the functionalism wim which it is often credited.
Epstein's, Kracauer's, and Benjamin's discussions of thc perceptual
changes they saw around mem present us wim thc empirical evidence mar
mey at least were fatigued by thcir experience of modern lifc. In their
encounters with me machine's image, we can scc its felt superior vitality to
me straining, weakened, and evcr tiring observer. Taken togethcr with me
image as a fetish object and the camera as a machine, this is thc final
element mat sets the conditions for the modern phantasmagoria of magical cinema. A "new way of feeling;' Bresson calJed it.
eH A P TER a
Bresson's Phantasmagoria
Idle horror is always accompanicd by the words, "I told you so!"
- Max Horkheimer and Thcodor Adorno, The Dialectic ofEnlightemnent
Raul Ruiz defines shamanic cinema as onc that records "a week mat has
never been cxperienced but still proves perfectly reaJ~' 1 Brcsson's t>Argent
depicts such a week, aJmough the time framc is on the order of ayear. The
film simply follows tl1e evcnts that occur when two pubescent boys pass a
forged bank.note, "conjoining;' as Stcvc Shaviro puts it, "absolute necessity to shcer contingency~' 2 The two boys pass me forgcd bill at a photography shop. 3 Yvon, a man who supports his wife and daughtcr by
delivering fucl oil, is givcn me note as payment and wrongly accused and
convictcd of passing countcrfeit money aftcr he in turn uses it to buy
lunch. He men tries his hand at real crime, driving a getaway car for a bank
robbery, fails miserably and gets caught and put into prison. U pon rclease
from prison, he takes to murder. First, he knifes to dcath me keeper of a
guest housc in which he boards, men he kills an entirc family and finally
their housckeeper, who had befriended him.
The magicaJ power of money, unleashcd in me photography shop, initiates the mctan1orphoses of Yvon from an unremarkable working man to
an ineffccntaJ criminal and finally an affcctless killer. At me same time,
anomcr form of sorcery takcs hold in which me movic camera levcls,
indeed overturns, me distinction between people and things. The neutralizcd subjectivity of thc film's characters is due to Bresson's particular
use of actors, which strivcs to make tl1em appear as natural automatons on
tl1e onc hand, and his relish - both aural and visual- of texturcs and
patterns, ti1e details mat mai.ntai.n the prcemine.nce of me surface vaJue of
mings, on tl1e other. His subjects, "drained of aU affect;' and his objects,
brilliant, shimmering fetishcs, produce a cinematography in which, indeed, "a defin te social rclation between l pcople] assumes, in thcir cyes,
tl1e fantastic form of a relationship between things."4 The "fantastic form;'
me phantasmagoria, is opened up to us in such a way mat it reveaJs not
Savage Theory
108
only its horrific potential but also its potential as, in Benjamin's terms,
"redeemable wish image."5 Bresson's repetid ve form and the way he drains
his actors of life's blood creates an aesthetic of fatigue that Epstcin would
surely recognizc. And though Bresson rescinds subjectivity, one might
say, once and for all, he offers back to us the object world- and it is
brilliant, horrific, and alive.
With a mind to understanding bespoken subjects and animated objects,
this analysis begins with a discussion of Bresson's repetitive style. To deal
more specifically with the phantasmagoric effect of Bresson's stylc, it
makes a temporary distinction between his objects and his subjects. Bresson's particular notions about acting replicare reifying stmctures to destroy subjectivity, yet his rich, baianced fran1es render the world of objects
bounteous. Money, the title and subject of the film, in its estrangement as
a Bressonian object enacts the unnatural liveness of capital: "i.e., past,
materialised, and dead labour [ is turned] into capital, into val u e big with
value, a live monster that is fmitful and multiplies."6 Tolstoy's story "The
Forged Coupon;' upon which the film is based, is set in late feudal ratl1er
than capitalist society, where tl1e act of counterfeiting presages capital.
Capital's unnaturallife is finally absorbed by storytclling in Tolstoy's story.
Bresson's version, by contrast, keeps the money alive.
Bresson's cinematography in PArgent is so even, so measured that he can
render the slap of a fa ce tl1rough the consequent spilling of hot coffee with
a violcnce tlut is on a par with if not greater tl1an thc massacre of a family.
Though such immanent rationality displays a kind of reification of violence, Bresson's careful doses of reality creare a form of repetition witl1 its
own poetic force: a resounding redundancy that makes tl1ings appear both
inevitable and, at the same time, recuperable.
Bresson shoots his scenes as animated tableaux, each lasting approximately the same amount of time, often shot at medium range, usually
with a somm lens straight on, simply cutting from one tablea u to the next
as if the film were a documentary slidc show. Camera movement is confined; tracking shots sparsely follow significant movement; pans define
the field, they don't rcveal in any convcntional fashion. Like the epic scene
in Brecht, tl1e shot in Eisenstein, these scenes are "so many tableau.x:' as
Barthes devcloped the term in "Brecht, Diderot, Eisenstein?' 7 Barthes
writes that such scencs are "laid out (in the sense in which one says the table
Bresson's Phantasmagoria
is laid)"; they "answer perfectly to that dramatic unity theorized by Diderot: firmly cut out ( remember the tolcrance shown by Brecht with
regard to tl1e ltalian curtain-stage, his contempt for indefinite theatresopen a ir, theatre in the round), erecting a meaning but manifesting the
production of that meaning, they accomplish the coinciden ce of the visual
and the ideal dcoupages" ( 71). Such decoupage or "cutting out;'8 whcrein
the viewing eye ( or the mind) becomes the apex of a visual trianglc,
creares "sovereign" images with "clearly defined edges" in which "everytl1ing tl1at it admits with its field is promoted into essence, into light, into
view."9 And like the "perfect instanr:' which Diderot conceived as the ideal
moment ehosen by the painter, these scenes are "hieroglyphs" tlut portray
an instant that is "totally concrete and totally abstraer" ( 73). 10
Sound, almost always diegetic, is magnified justa notch, selected out as
a contrapuntal additional clement, another texture altogether reimposed
onto the moving tablcau. The rigid, even steps ofhigh heels, tl1e soft hum
of a mechanical Aoor buffer, move in another dimension, haunting the
film with the tactile effects of the real. When used as concatenation between cuts in rare instances, sow1ds startle rather than smooth transitions.
The announcement "The court;' for example, just before a close-up of the
rich fold of red cloth signifying the law (as opposed to the conventionally
boring pan shot of a courtroom with heavy furniture and peoplc awaiting
the law), provides a Brechtian banner instead of a "nantralistic" transition. Water Aowing, bilis crackling, a purse popping shut- tl1ese evct)'day
sounds are repeated throughout thc film both to estrangc us from tl1e
imagc as well as to enrich tl1c tableau. Bazin describes this phenomcnon
while discussing Bresson's "realism": "They are there deliberately as neutrals, as forcign bodies, like a grain of sand that gets into and seizcs up a
piece of machinery. If the arbitrariness of tl1eir choice resembles an abstraction, it is the abstraction of the concrete integral. They are like lines
drawn across an image to affirm its transparency, as dust affirms the transparency of a diamond; it is impurity at its purest?' 11 Not real, not symbol,
Bazin explains, Bresson's sonic punctuations work to highlight the corporeality of things while at tl1e same time confirming them as representation and not real. Or, as Bresson himsclf put it, they "retouch some real
with some real?' 12 Bresson's way of using sound as "dust" to affirm tl1e
image's transparency and its purity partakes of the "equipment-free aspect" ofthe image in full mcasure. In tl1is, Bresson pcrforms what Miriam
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Bresson's Phantasmagoria
pie and objects come in sets of threes: three prisoners each time, three
policemen, three judges, three kitchen towels hanging on the line ro dry.
Like a visual ellipsis, three is just enough of something to denote its
infinite repetition.
S usan Sontag characterizes Bazin's understanding of Bresson's rational
repetitive stylc as a kind of dramatic prophecy being laid out. 15 By contrast, Sontag sees it as essentially an antidran1atic deadpan effect, a complete lack of conventional suspense that produces, in addition ro a space
for reflection, a sense that everything is "foreordained" ( 1 84). She writes,
"The key clatters in the lock; another interrogation; again the door clangs
shut; fadeout. lt is a very dead-pan constmction, which puts a sharp break
on emotional involvement'' ( 18 3). Bresson's use of repetition, for Sontag,
at one and the san1e time provides distancing and a sense of prescience.
Bazin's answer ro Bresson's puzzling repetition derives from Kierkegaard, who wrote: "Repetition's love is in truth the only happy !ove. Like
recollection's !ove, it does not have the restlessness of hope, the uneasy
adventurousness of discovery, but neither does it have the sadness of
recollection- it has rhe blissful security of the moment." 16 Kierkegaard
defines his "ways of k.nowing, loving" into three categories: hopc, recollection, and repetition: "Hope is a new garment, stiff and starched and
lustrous, but ir has never been tried on, and therefore one does not know
how becoming ir will be or how ir will fit. Recollection is a discarded
garment that does not fit, however beautiful it is, for one has outgrown it.
Repetition is an indestructible garment that fits closely and tenderly, it
neither binds nor sags" ( 132). For Kierkegaard, repetition is familiar,
mature, but most important, repetition, unlike hope and recollection, is of
the present. If Bresson's use of repetition can be derived in part from
Kierkegaard, he, roo, takes a visual, aura!, epistemological comfort in the
familiarity repetition produces; but prophecy, at this srage, would be the
modern critic's (post freud) intervention.
Iris not clear whether Bresson's "compulsion to repear" derives from a
value on things that ha ve stood the test of time or is itself a compulsion ro
test time. Shifting from philosophy ro psychoanalysis, Laplanch and Pontalis show that Freud found repetition a bit more vexing than did Kierkegaard: "At the leve! of psychopathology, the compulsion ro repeat is an
ungovernable process originating in rhe wKonscious; as a result of its
action the subject deliberately places himself in a distressing situation,
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112
Bresson's Phantasmagoria
thc impassive lcns, he writes of thc camera: "What no human eye is capablc of catching, no pcncil, brush, pen of pinning clown, your camera
catches without knowing what ir is, and pins ir clown with a machinc's
scrupulous indifference." 19 The machinc is thc final autonomous organ of
his phantasmagoria. "Scrupulous indiffercncc" ora sense of cut-off-ness is
thc essence of Bresson's film form.
A series of tableatLX often begin with thc closc-up of an object, itself an
integral actor in thc sequence of the ensuing shots. For instance, the film
begins with a shot of a money machine, thus paving the way for the
anonymity, rationality, and capriciousness that will be attributed as charactcristics of money, one of the actors in the film. Another neccssity of
modcrn life, again a technology that disembodies, the telephone, begins
the fatcful scquence of the passing of the false note. An object that conceals identity, the red rubber gloves, part thing, part person, oily black
from the fuel of the modern economy, return a gas hose to rl1e pump. Next
we see an oil gauge, thc machine that measures and distributes capitalism's
life's blood. Close-ups of these three objects form the establishing shots
to initiate Yvon's ambiguous agency. The gloves themsclves are a mark of
this ambiguity.
Although the lively objects, the gloves, are an extreme example, closeups of objects are continually used to ground medium shots that follow
justas establishing shots are used in more convcntionally shot films. This
dcvice gives to the object something not unlike an ontological presence, a
point of view, a piece of rl1e subjectivity that guides rl1e film. Objects are,
on a formal level at least, speaking the tcxt if not its subjccts. Bresson's
repeated, insistent filmic demat1d that d1c spcctator yicld subjectivity to
the "mysterious, silent" object answers Epstein's "wish to understand the
lives of objects" in full meas u re. 20
Wc catl all but witness objects accruc thcir fctish power by their inccsSatlt repetition. The first shot of Yvon is a shot of his gloved hands. Already, d1ey are more like indepcndent things than part of his body. 2 1 A
close-up of bis hatld then signals the first violcnt action in d1e film, his
attack on the caf owner. His hands are shot close-up again and again,
accruing violent meaning but also bccoming d1ings in thcmselves, embodying these past actions. After he kills thc hotel manager, they are
foreign matter. When he walks clown thc hotel stairway after this first
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murder, the initial shot of the red oily gloves comes back to haunt the
scene. As he walks clown the stairs we see not his head but a bloody hand
attached toa body in a medium to deep distance shot. The rich sounds of
the water run from the sink where he washes them, but they exist now as a
violent, repeatable fact such that only the bloody water needs to be shown.
The missing shot of the hands signals a dar k moment of transformation of
thing into fetish. A bloody imprint of bis hand in close-up on the house
door of his penultimate victims, along with the sound of a single drop of
water, are enough to signa! the final violcnce that will ensue. When seated
at the table awaiting bis cognac at the film's end, he stares at his hands;
strangers to him now, they ha ve alife of their own. 22
Money, a very particular object, comes alive in l'Awent, acting out and
estranging its force as a demonic, unnamral commodity. Money's first
appearance in the form of an allowance for one of the boys who willlater
initiate the counterfeit bill is quite modest. Money denied is seductive;
when the mother's black purse is snapped closed it is framed such that it
looks like Pandora's box. In the bedroom of the boy's friend, the counterfeit note supersedes the exchange of a watch, and before leaving, the boy
looks through an album of nude women as though sorne mysterious
power had been unleashed. When the false note is finally passed, the
change-the effortlessly produced false profit (but effacing a world of
social relations with devastating consequences) -crack!es like lit gunpowder. Money, as hyberbolized capital through counterfeiting, is a "live
monster" that is "fruitful and multiplies." Money maintains a role in the
film until its end, when Yvon's final victim goes to the bank ro get a large
amount of money that is barely contained by her purse. Before he delivers
his final blow he asks again for the money, although it's difficult to fathom
why, so affectless has he become that he appears witl1out desire altogether.
Although Bresson was faithful to Tolstoy's story, tl1is is not the same
money that changed hands in 1904 rural Russia. By counterfeiting a banknote, tl1e boys in Tolstoy's story enacted the creation of capital, always a
strange and mysterious commodity, but which then still appeared strange.
After the wood salesman, on whom the note was forced, loses it to the caf
owner and is thrown in jail for the night as a drunk, he takes up stealing
horses and becomes quite successful until he is killed by a character who
becomes a murderer like Yvon. This character thcn is reformed by his last
victim's forgiveness and becomcs an ascctic pacifist who tells stories that
Bresson's Phantasmagoria
circulare and in mrn inspire people todo good works. U pon hearing one
ofhis stories, for example, two prisoncrs, ordered to perform an execution
in a neighboring village, refuse. The anonymous, mysterious power of
capital to change people's lives is cut short as waste in the hands of the caf
keeper and transformed into storytelling. By contrast, in Bresson's story
the capital is allowed to live out its devilish life, and Bresson goes on to tell
the tale.
Another instance of estranged capital, tl1e folklore of the custom of an
illegally baptized peso bill in Cauca, Colombia, occurred in a society that
lived at the crossroads between capitalist and precapitalist modes of production. Money that was secretly slipped into a child's Catholic baptism
destroyed the rimal's effect on the child and can1e to embody the unnamral and unsettling power of capital. In one story, tl1e baptized billete,
alive with spirit force, comes to blows with another such billete when they
meet up in a merchant's cash till. 23 The money takes on alife of its own and
precipitares fortune or misformnc, ruining or producing great yields, for
instance, from the cash crops for which it had provided the capital. The
striking feamre of aU these exan1ples ( Bresson's money, Tolstoy's banknote, and the Cauca valley billete) is the way money embodies the anonymity and fatalism of magic. In none of these instances is the passing of
the note guided by chance alone; certain people are in a better position to
question, others must give change. Men are more disposed to the devil
contraer and its easy money than are women. The upper-class boys wield
their class authority over the mcrchant woman such that she must accept
the questionable bill. Yvon doesn't question the notes, and when he later
protests, his class position defcats him. Yet money's anonymous agency
does more than link the film together. Moncy, live and monstrous, makes
things happen.
Some objects shimmcr as material fctishes. The stilllife of carrots that
burst forth from his living room as Yvon opens his front door, for example, is an object that just "looks as if it wants to be there."24 Sueh an image,
with its strange placcment of an everyday object where it doesn't belong
and its vibrant color, has no late m meaning; it is above aU pure matter. The
materiality of such an image has a likewise material effect. It addresses the
viewer as a "corporeal-material bcing;' seizing her, as Kracauer put it,
"with skin and hair."25 As with Benjamin's " innervation;' the image grabs
the senses, Miriam Hansen, and pulls them into direct contact: "The
115
Savage Theory
116
Bresson1s Phantasmagoria
doing.' And also: ' Don't think about what you say, don'r rhink about what
yo u do." 29 The subject is always tranquilized ( it is the hand that acts out
violence), and nothing seems more absurd tlun the scene in which they
administer Valium to Yvon, nothing more right than that his rebellion
would be ro attempt to tranquilize himself to deatl1, as if mere! y finishing
the injection. Equally numb is Yvon's final victim, well-schooled in accepting her lot. The scene in which we sce her perform her daily chores is a
dance of perpetual motion choreographed long ago. Each task leads effortlessly to the next without hesitation, no matter how spontaneous it
musr be. She moves from ironing shirrs to cleaning up a broken wine glass
as if she were dancing her version of "The Mind Is a Muscle" for Yvonne
Rainer's Trio A. 30
Although objects perform many a srar turn in this film, Bresson devoted
much tl10ught to the training of actors. He did not want drama from his
actors, bm rather the unthought gestures that characterize much of how
we behave in daily life. Reallife is hardly drama tic, Bresson writes: "Ninetenths of our movement obey habir and automatism. It is anri-nature to
subordinare them to will and ro tllought.'' He trains bis " models" to
likewise become amomaric. Once they have been trained by reperirion
and calculation they will be "right'': "Models who ha ve become automatic
( everyrhing weighed, measured, rimed, repeated ten, twenty rimes) and
are then dropped in the middle of the evems of your film- rheir relations
wim the objects and persons around them will be right, because they will
not be rhought." 31 Bresson drains his models of spontaneity and habit
so tllat rhey become wmbics, filmic reified subjects playing out the last
acts of capitalism's midnight show. They are right because they are not
thought. To achieve tl1is the Bressonian process bears some resemblance
to metllods of torture: "Model. Reduce to tl1e mnimum the share his consciousness has. Tighten the meshing witllin which he cannot any longcr
not be him and where he can now do notl1ing tl1at is not useful" ( 48).
In l~rgent1 rhe same form of acting serves for all of the characters,
except of course when they are "acring;' as witl1 Lucien's overt dissimulation. What looks like elegance and reserve on the parr of the upper-class
characters in the film (the child's mother and father) becomes the merchant's keen eye for business and rhe accommodarion of class structures
( the shopkeeper's wife, in particular, as she reluctantly assents to accept
the forged note), and finally serves justas easily to render submission and
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Savage Theory
118
victimization (Yvon and his wife). The same delibera te and inexpressive
acting style is, at al! times, right.
Bresson's characters are right because they appear to exist etfortlessly as
social subjects in a highly rationalized world, their class uniforms and
social assumptions fitted tightly o ver their skins. The people in l~rgent are
not so much characters as walking social facts. Lukcs saw tl1e similarity
( and virtual interchangeability) of aiJ workers, regardlcss of what it is they
do, by virtue of the fact that they were under someone else's control: "The
hierarchic dependence of the worker, the clerk, the tcclmical assistant, the
assistant in an academic institute and the civil servant and soldier has a
comparable basis: namely that the tools, supplies and financia! rcsources
cssential botl1 for the business-conccrn and for cconomic survival are in
the hands, in tl1e one case, of the entrepreneur and, in the other case, of the
poli ti cal master."32 Lukcs goes on to say, quoting Weber, that "the modern capitalist concern is based inwardly abo ve al! on calculation?' Bresson's
calculators (the gas pump meter, tl1e money machinc, tl1e cash registers)
and his formal calculating methods throughout thc film are of a more
ambiguous agency tl1an tl1e simple entreprcncur or political master. The
objcctivc camera lens, by its very inditference, bears tl1e subjectivity of
calculation itsclf. In its "scrupulous inditfcrcnce;' Brcsson's can1cra shares
thc calculating gaze of the coffin maker.
Justice, meted out three times in tl1e film, is cqually calculated. Weber
maintained tl1at the system of capitalism required "a system of justice and
administration whose workings can be rationally calculated, at least in
principie, according to fixed general laws, just as the probable performance of a machine can be calculated?'33 At the pronouncement ofYvon's
tl1ree-year sentence, the court disperses and Yvon is led back to prison in
handcuffs. A shot of his wife precedes a shot of the exit door over which
we hear tl1e severe, even clack of high hccls beating out the time of this
sequence's final tableau. Bresson uses the familiar sound to estrange and to
emphasize tl1e law's calculation. We see it herc in all its devilishly smooth,
rin1alistic rationality.
In addition to the camera and the law, anothcr subject, the body, and
particular! y the female body, performs a silent role. The walls of the interiors are adorned with images of womcn, often nude. The frame and
photo shop where the counterfeit bill is baptized is discreetly decorated
with women's images and a single large "artistic" nude hangs upstairs,
Bresson)s Phantasmagoria
where the owners live. Perhaps tl1e most striking sct of women's images
are tl1ose tl1at form collages o ver the beds of each of the prisoners in their
cells. Although Bresson refuses to give life to the live people's bodiesto animare tl1e actors at all- he haunts the film with exotic pictures of
women's bodies. This !ove-hate relationship with the body bears the traces
of a phenomenon that Horkheimer and Adorno maintaincd in 1945 "colors al! recent culture." Because of the unnatural division of body and spirit,
they wrote, "The body is scorncd and rejected as something inferior, and
at the samc time desired as sometl1ing forbiddcn, objectified, and alienated."34 Bresson resorts to the representation of the body as picture and
photo perhaps because unlike the spirit, the body is something that can be
got at, but only grasped asan object without spirit. "Culture:' they wrote,
"defines the body as a thing which can be possessed ... a distinction is
madc bctween the body and the spirit, thc concept of power and command, as the object, tl1e dcad thing, the 'corpus'" ( 232). The division
betwcen body and spirit pits them against each other. Repeatedly framing
the body as photo ( tl1ink of the young boys evenly mrning tl1c black pages
of thc photo album befo re they do thcir mischief), Bresson names the
body as corpus, the dead thing.
Yvon's murders, in mrn, might be secn as nature's revenge, as characterized by Horkheimer and Adorno: "In man's denigration ofhis own body,
naturc takes its revenge for tl1e fact that man has reduced nature to an
objcct for domination, a raw material. The compulsivc urge to cruelty and
desrruction springs from the organic displacement of the relationship
betwccn the mind and body" (233). Because "tl1e body cannot be remade
into a noble object it remains tl1e corpsc." The corpse 1body Yvon becomes
nature's advocate for tl1e body in the all-out "ranear for reification" that
characterizcs thc entire film. Like a werewolf, he is aki n to those destructivc characters Horkheimer and Adorno strivc to w1derstand, who "repeat, in tl1eir blind anger against the living objcct all tl1at they ca~mot
unmakc: the di vis ion of life into spirit and its object'' ( 234).
Thc godless desert that dictares in Brcsson's objcct world is "the new
urban-industrial phantasmagoria drea111-world, in which neitl1er exchange
value nor use value exhausted thc meaning of objects?'35 Bresson "rouses"
objects, in the form of the material detail, from their "death-sleep."36 If
Bresson has a "spiritual sryle;' it is akin to Bcnjamin's notion of redemption
through "redeemable wish-imagc." For Benjamn, howcver, "ir was as
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Savage T11eory
120
'dream 111 agcs of the collcctive'- both distorting illusion and redeemable
wish-imagc-that they took on poltica! meaning." Thc lived experience
of al! this, "the false consciousness of a collective subjectivity, at once
dccply alienared and yet capable of cntering into the commodity landscape
of utopian symbols with uncritical enthusiasm is what Benjamn called
'drean1 consciousness."'37 Bresson operares on the all too perilous divide
between alienation and dream consciousness. His cinematic power ro
neutralize the image, using medium shots and gentle can1era movement,
soft-pedals through the phantasmagoric landscape and avoids detonating
the land mines of commodity fetishism ro explode into the redeemable
wish image on the one hand or fall into the murky waters of mere melodrama on the other.
Bresson's cool negotiation through the phantasmagoria gives his film
its tension. Through his somnambulist aesthetic, his insistent repetition
usurps the power of the dream state to creare a state of profound fatigue.
Although the fetish is inexhaustible, the Bressonian subject is always tired,
fatigued. The power in l'Argent1 the feeling of externa! control, is the
power of the fetish.
L'Argent produces, both texrually and formally, the modern elements of
the phamasmagoria: alienation, repetition, reification, fetishization, the
objectification and degradation of the body, and money as a live, unnarural tl1ing. lt is a world of fatigued, affectless subjects, shimmering
objects, and tactile sounds. What we do in this phantasmagoria, whether
or not it is the dream world from which we can retrievc our wish images,
is still an open question. Perhaps this accounts for why one minks, immediately u pon viewing the film, that Bresson somehow got it "right"- and
the numb stammering that realization produces.
In light of Bresson's narcotic poetics, it is somehow right tl1at, when
Patti Smith fell off the stage and broke her neck, she had a projector
installed in her hospital room and watched movies: "for awhile there was
only one film- A u hasard1 Balthazar. i saw it severa! times under mild
sedation. for a time m y mind was a notebook of stills, annotation and the
art of this cenrury~' 38 As Bresson put it: "Cinematography: a new way of
writing, thcrefore, of feeling~' 39
cHAPTER 9
Reverie
Sacrifi((: is heat, in which thc intimacy of those who makc up the systcm of
common works is rcdiscovcrcd.- Gcorgcs Bataillc, The Accttrsed Share
The collapse of conscious cognition into fatigue, distraction, or exhaustion produccd fcrtile terrain for thc animation of the objcct world. Although conditions do not appear to bode well, my interest here is in the
emancipation wc cxperience in illuminated images. Such is the narure of
the rcverie released when "tl1c human motor" 1 rurns toward thc light, and
the light of thc cinema in particular. To rerurn to the devastation Tess
D'Urberville suffered by the ricks' domination, recall that whilc her senses
were utterly broken apart from me machinc's vibrations and tl1e endlcss
mcchanical movement in which her body automatically participated,
Hardy describes her condition in tl1e following way: "The incessant
quivcring, in which every fibrc of hcr frame participated, had thrown her
into a srupefied rcverie in which her arms workcd on independently of hcr
consciousness."2 The "stupcficd reveric" into which Tess was thrown by
the brutal fusion ofher body with tl1e machinc rcsults for all of its violcncc
in a fantastical, animated vision, thc vision of a ycllow rivcr running uphill: "Against thc grey north sky; in front of it the long red clcvator likc a
Jacob's laddcr, on which a pcrperual strcam of thrcshed straw ascended, a
yellow river running up-hill, and spouting out on tl1e top of tl1c rick"
( 426). This visual animation's appcarance is provoked by the numbing
effects of the machine on the sensate bodv. as wcll as the social intimaC\'.
lost to rationalized labor. In this it prcsents a modcl of film spectatorship: an audiencc at a scnsatc and social loss with cverytl1ing to gain in
thc cinema.
When Wolfgang Schivclbusch chartcd thc fclt cffccts of changes in lighting ovcr thc past two hundred years that culminare in thc clcctric lightbulb, he began with the hearth firc. Thc breaking of the unity of the hcarth
fire, at once used for cooking, heating, and light, brought with ir thc
Savage Theory
122
dispersion of peoplc in con1mon spaces and the loss of what he calls the
drean1like quality of watching the flarnes, or flame in later gas lighting.
This, he concludes, is what we look to when we turn from modernity's
darkness toward the cinema: "Common to all these media, from the diorama to the cinemascopc screen, is a darkened auditorium anda brightly
illuminated image.... The world of the diorama and the cinema is an
illusory drearn world that light opens up to the viewer. He can lose himself
in it in the same way that he can submerge himself in contemplating tl1e
flame of a carnp-fire ora candJe. In this respect, the film is closer to the fire
tl1an to the theatre .... The power of artificial light to creare its own
reality only exists in darkness. In the dark, light is life." 3
I want tola y claim to this dement of cinema's archaic past by taking up
Eisenstein's connection between the animated cartoon and fire to suggest
some further attributes of fire's reverie, and in so doing, show another side
to Tess's otl1erwise morbid story.
Between 1940 and 1941, Sergei Eisenstein produced tl1e core of a monograph on Walt Disney, whom he had befriended in Hollywood in September 1930. Eisenstein's abiding concern with art practices' "dual unity''
differentiates him from Epstein and Benjamin, whose interests were in the
way cinema spectatorship circumvented conscious cognition and led to a
bodily felt mode of perception. This monograph, however, like his musings on sensual thinking in his earlier 1935 essay, "Film Form: New Problems;' dwells mainly in the arena of "attraction;' which was, after all, as
Gunning indicares, originally Eisenstein's term coined very early on in his
career as a drarnaturge to connote the sensate spectatorship of the amusement park ride. Eisenstein's fascination with fire, whose moving fiarnes
prefigure the arnorphous quality of the cartoon, touches on a phenomenon that bears on attracted spectatorship as well as the creative process.
The monograph on Disney is representative of the final trajectory of
Eisenstein's thought away from a materialist, cognitive construction of
cinema as a rational system of causes and effects whose efficacy resides in
the images onscreen alone, toward primordial associations he investigares
through bis readings in anthropology and folklore. More important for us
now, however, is that he attempts here to understand the very attraction of
attraction, which has since gained new theoretical currency.4 Constructively aligned with Benjamin's tactile (rather than contemplative) form of
perception, the astonishments produced by the cinema of attraction are
Rcverie
understood as a form of modern shock. On the one hand, it is representative of all that smarts when experience loses its final bits of ground to
representation, but on the other, astonishment also produces an immediate sensation, a moment of physical joy. 5 In theory, this construction unfurls a profoundly modern nostalgia, repeating the moment of loss while
the referent is long gane. Insofar as we turn away from explanation toward attraction's theoretical revelry, we regain the immediacy and the intimacy lost to what Bataille calls labor's "operations;' the sarne loss, albeit in
tl1e far more sedate form of"reading;' that Tess suffered at the hands of the
rick. 6 The attraction of attraction, like tl1e fiame's intoxication, lies in its
visual heat, heat that sustains thaumaturgical mental activity.
Reusing and rethinking material with which he had been occupied since
bis trip to Europe, America, and finally Mexico, Eisenstein points to the
way the cartoon awakens and momentarily satisfies the human desire to
become something else with its metarnorphosing drawings. Like the playfui nature of his subject, Eisenstein's text consists of fragments and free
associations arlmd myriad exarnples taken from a wide cultural and temporal range of images. Key features of iliis unfinished monograph are the
child, tl1e phenomenon of fire, and animism.
Eisenstein's "dual unity'' notwithstanding, this monograph is concerned
with the emancipation from logic, linear thought, social and even sexual
repressions that is suggested to him by the cartoon form. Disney's figures,
neitl1er entirely animal nor certainly not human, are free to move, grow,
and transform beyond "once and forever prescribed norms of nomenclature, form and behavior." 7 Animated cartoons are totally irresponsible;
there are no actors, no biological or physicallaws. "Like the sun, like trees,
like birds, like tl1e ducks and mice, deer and pigeons that run across his
screen;' Disney simply is, Eisenstein puts it, "beyond good and evil" ( 9).
The anthropologist Paul Radin described the famous Trickster of the
Winnebago Indians with striking similarity. "In what must be regarded as
its earliest and most archaic form, as fotmd arnong tl1e North American
Indians;' Radin wrote, "Trickster wills nothing consciously''; he "knows
neither good nor evil"; he "possesses no values, moral or social"; he is "at
tl1e merey of his passions and appetites." Although he is identified with
certain animals, "Basically he possesses no well-defined and fixed form."
As far as Radin can make out, "he is primarily an inchoate being of undetermined proportions, a figure foreshadowing tl1e shape of man.... He
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124
possesses intestines wrapped around his body, and an equally long penis,
like-wise wrapped around his body with his scrotum on top of it. Yet
regarding his specific features we are, significantly enough, told nothing."8
The inchoate, amorphous quality of the cartoon is what fascinated Eisenstein most of all, and he locates its power in the archaic world of folklore
and mythology.
The Trickster cycle could weli have been used as material by Tex Avery
or Chuck Jones, but probably wouldn't have tempted Disney. Disney's
identification with the culture industry in Critical Theory, his association
with McCarthyism, but especiaily toda y with the recent growth of Disney's entertainment parles, whose study is itself becoming an industry,
malees it extremcly difficult for us to see Disney's cartoons in particular in a
radical, liberatory light. Eisenstein's reference to Disney as tl1e supreme
capitalist entertainer who provides me freedoms onscrccn that are denied
in real life does not even begin t11e criticisms that could and have been
leveled. The wholesome American character of all mings Disncy wim
which anyone growing up in me United States over me past forry years
has been force-fed malees any critique short of fingers clown me mroat
inadcquate. Although Eisenstein does consider Disner's cartoons to be
the ultimare in capitalist escapism, his analysis concentrares on me formal appeal of animated metamorphoses. Despite the arguments for and
against me redemptive character of me Disney cartoon and its reception in
a significant public sphere,9 what is of importance here, following Eisenstein, is not to worry me question of good and evil but ro explore such
freedoms from moral and physical constraints that are manifest in me
animated cartoon, regardless of content or context. As Miriam Hansen
has pointed out, mese freedoms were not unnoticed by Benjamn, for example, and she reads tl1eir combination of technology and nature as a prototype for Benjamin's concept of iru1ervation. "Whilc mechanicaily produced:' she writes, "the miracles of the animated cartoon secm improvised
out of me bodies and objects on t11e screen, in a freewheeling exchange
between anima te and inanimate world." 10 The appeal of the hybrid creaturc - me not quite animal, not quite human m o use wim gloves on its
four fingers - extends to the anima red cartoon in general: "The appeal of
me animated creature, and this goes beyond Mickcy, owcs much to its
hybrid status, its blurring of human and animal, two-dimensional and
mree-dimensional, corporeal and neuro-energetic qualities" ( 44). Eisen-
R.cverie
stein is using Disney to talle about t11e cartoon form itself, and tl1e cartoon
form itsclf total k about a much more basic attraction. Its appeal is old, as
old as me Trickster myt11S, for instance: 11
125
"He who chews me, he will defecare; he will defecatel" "Well;' mought the
Trickster, "1 wonder who it is who is speaking. I know very well that ifl chew
ir, I will not defecare." [ Bur he keeps looking around for the speaker and finally
discovers, much to his astonishment, that it is a bu lb on a bus h.] The bulb it
was that was spcaking. So he seizcd ir, pur ir in his mouth, chewed it, and then
swallowed it. [Later he begins to break wind.] "Well this, I suppose, is what it
meant .... In any case, 1 am a grear man even if I do expcl a littlc gas!' [He
breaks wind again and again until "his rel"tum began to smart." This continues
until he is propelled forward by his own wind's force.] Then, again he broke
wind. This time the force of the expulsion sent him far up in the air and he
landed on the ground on his stomach. The next time he had to hang on toa log
so high he was thrown. However, he raised himsclf up and, after awhile,
landed on the ground, the log on top of him. He was almost killed by the fail.
[Thc force of his wind continues to strengthen such that he pulls up by their
roots the increasingly larger and strongcr trces he has clung to.] 12
Ncedless to say, me bulb spoke me trum. The story goes on, after ever
more fantastical explosions, to tell of his being buried in his own dung,
and men it goes on some more. Justas cartoons are often propelied by me
drawn figure, me Trickster stories never stop; mey slip from one magical
event to the next as me Trickster ambles foolishly along, talking to trees,
animals, people, and himself along me way, making mischief, doing truly
terrible tl1ings, and taking care of his penis, which he carries, at mis point
in the cycle, in a wooden box. 13
Eisenstein's fascination witl1 Disney's animation is based on "me fantastical, alogical arder" in which it is possible to "achieve a mastery and supremacy in me realm of freedom from tlle shackles of logic, from shackles
in general." 14 Disney, says Eisenstein, "constantly gives us prescriptions
from folkloric, mythological, prelogical mought - but always rejecting,
pushing aside logic, brushing aside logistics, formal logic, me 'logical
case'" ( 23). The freedom Eisenstein speaks of is me elasticity wim which
animated forms move and change, me amorphous quality of cartoon animaran. The "attraction" of what Eisenstein terms "plasmaticness" is charactcrizcd by a "rejection of once and forever allotted form, freedom from
tl
Savage Theory
126
ossification, the ability to dynamically assume any form" ( 21). Plasmaticness refers to "a being of definite form, a being which has attained a
definite appearance"- the drawing in the cartoon- which nonetheless
"behaves like the primal protoplasm, not yet possessing a 'stable' form,
but capable of assuming any form" ( 21). The figure in the cartoon has a
definite, but w1stable, form. Why, wonders Eisenstein, who had, after all,
desperately sought ( and failed, in the eyes of increasingly powerful critics) to create films that wouJd be intelligiblc and attractive to millions,
why, he wonders not disinterestedly, is this attraction so attractive?
Eisenstein rehearses a few arguments. First, he considers the possibility
that plasmaticness activates a "'memory' of his own existence at a similar
stage- the origin of the foetus or further back down the evolutionary
scale." Though he finds this implausible, he does consider it if only to
move on to locate the attraction to be an American one, which fills the
desire that is as continually evoked as it is denied in capitalist society, the
"ability to become whatever yo u wish" ( 21). The desire for omnipotence,
to become something else, is of course, easily generalized, and he does just
that by extending this desire to eighteenth-century Japan as well as high
European society.
Although an urge to expand the reason for the cartoon's appeal even
further emerges in the text with more examplcs, he doesn't claim that the
appeal is Lmiversal. He concludes his exploration by leaving that guestion
open: "A lost changeability, fluidity, suddenness of formations- that's the
'subtext' brought to the viewer who lacks all this by these seemingly
strange traits which permeate folktales, cartoons, the spineless circus performer and the seemingly groundless scattering of extremities in Disney's
drawings" ( 21). The desire for the ability to beco me "whatever yo u wish"
bears a strong resemblance to the desire Benjamn articulated in his essay
on the mimetic faculty. Here Benjamn refers not to the cartoon but to the
hwnan faculty for mimicry: "[ Man's] gift of seeing resemblances is nothing other than a rudiment of the powerful compulsion in former times to
become and behave like something else." 15 And indeed, the breadth of
Eisenstein's examples -Alice in Wonderland ( 1872, UK) ,Max undMoritz
( r 86 5, Germany), the famous French satirist Grandville ( 1 842) - would
suggest that this desire is not specific to American capitalism. When Eisenstein refers plasmaticness to "a lost changeability;' he is certainly contemplating something more basic than yet not uncongenial to the conditions of noncapitalistic society.
Reverie
127
Savage Theory
128
rocks of reason, when trying to explain this compulsion, may well rest
with the captivating nature of fire itself. The connection between animism
and fire is basic, according to the French philosopher Gastan Bachelard
( r884-1963). Put simply, "When one gets to the bottom of animism, one
always finds calorism. What 1 recognize to be living -living in the immediate sense- is what I recognize as being hot." 17
Though Bachelard's remark refers to animism rather than animation,
Eisenstein linked the two in the same way he had earlier linked cinema
identification, meraphor, and metonymy to primirive bclief: 18 "The very
idea, if yo u will, of the animated cartoon is like a direct embodiment of the
method of animism. Whether a momentary supplying of an inanimate
object with life and a soul, which we also preserve when we bump into a
chair and curse it as though it were a living being, or whether a long-term
supplying with life, with which primitive man endows inanimate nature.
And thus, what Disney does is connected wirh one of the deepest-set traits
of man's early psyche." 19 As if animated himself at the warm sign of life
from the fire's glow, Eisenstein abruptly launches into a theme that he will
sustain throughout the work: "The ghostly mask which prophesies ro the
witch in Snow White, appears in ... fire. And whar, if not fire, is capable of
most fully conveying the dream of a fl.owing diversity of forms!? And thus
arises The Moth and the Elame. lts he ro is- fire" ( 24).
For Eisensrein, fire was an important element ro consider as a foundation for the cartoon's attraction because of its movement, tl1e way tl1e
shapes change while we watch it. Like music, its images fl.ow continuously; they are eternally changeablc, "like tl1e play of its tongues, mobile
and endlessly di verse." "Visions in fire seem to be a cradle of metonymies"
( 33). The animation produced by fire provides an opening tl1rough which
sensuous tl1ought can emerge: "Persistent suggestion through fire, the
appearance of fire, the play of fire, images of fire, is capablc in certain cases
of provoking 'unconscious' and 'impulsive' conditions- that is, of bringing 'sensuous tl1ought' to the foreground, and forcing 'consciousness' into
the background" ( 32-3 3).
For sexologists and criminologists, Eisensrein nored, fire released repressed sexualiry and aggression. He suggesrs that the attraction to fire is
primitive, which explains why pyromania strikes tl1e essentially immature:
"When sensuous thought predominares - that is childhood." He gives tl1e
account of a fourteen-year-old girl whose case he discovered in his reading
Rcverie
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Savage Theory
130
this interdiction comes "our first general knowledge"; thus the "child's
problem of obtaining a personal knowledge of fire is the problem of clever
disobedience.... Like a little Prometheus he steals some marches" ( 11).
As with Eisenstein and Lyotard, Bachelard associates fire with the child
and the childlike fascination with phenomena. Most important, fire is not
essentially utilitarian but an object of contemplation, of reverie: "It is a
phenomenon both monotonous and brilliant, a really total phenomenon:
it speaks and soars, and it sings" ( 14).
Reverie, thought Bachelard, was the first and the "truly human use of
fire." lts other uses, such as for cooking and heating, were secondary. E ven
its sensation of warmth is secondary to its visual stimulation of the mind:
"To be sure, a fire warms us and gives us comfort. But one only becomes
fully aware of this comforting sensation after quite a long period of contemplation of the flames; one only receives comfort from the fire when
one leans his elbows on his knees and holds his head in his hands" ( r 4) . As
Eisenstein had also observed, this contemplation is archaic by nature and
most easily assumed and observed in children: "This attitude comes from
the distant past. The child by the fire assumes it naturally. Not for nothing
is it the attitude of the Thinker" ( r 4).
Fire's attraction is unlike the linear involvement of the dream or the
distanced perspective of a critic. Bending over toward the hearth " leads to
a very special kind of attention which has nothing in common with the
attention involved in watching or observing.... When near the fire, one
must be seated; one must rest without sleeping; one must engage in
reverie on a specific object'' ( 14- r 5). Furthermore, reverie before the fire
is less deep, more intellectualized than the experience of dreaming: "In
our opinion, this reverie is entirely different from the dream by the very
fact that it is always more or less centered upon one object. The dream
proceeds on its way in linear fashion, forgetting its original path as it
hastens along. The reverie works in a star pattern. It returns to its center to
shoot out new beams" ( r 4). Fire provokes intellectual yet non linear
thought that occupies a space between the dream world and 'conscious
cognition, enslaved neither to thc dream's incessant lincarity nor to the
shackles of logic. While Bachelard goes on to call fire the "metaphor of
metaphor" ( r r I ), the star pattern he evokes above, whose flames return
to the center to shoot out new bean1s, provides an apt image for Eisenstein's claim noted earlier, that fire is "a cradle of metonymies?' Eisenstein
Rcverie
saw the cartoon's appeal, its unfettered, metonymic associations that went
beyond good and evil, as a repetition of fire's attraction.
As with Eisenstein and Lyotard, Bachelard's fire is externalizing, it is
joyful, and it is excessive in its essence. He describes a medley of cookery
rl1at his grandmother prepared with eggs, soup, potatoes, and a waffle
iron: "Rectangular in form, it would crush clown the fire of thorns burning red as the spikes of sword lilies. And soon thegaufre or waffle would
be pressed against my pinafore, warmer to the fingers than to the lips. Yes,
then indeed I was eating tire, eating its gold, its odor and even its crackling
while d1e burning gaufre was crunching under my teeth. And it is always
like that, through a kind of extra pleasure - like dessert - that tire shows
itself a friend of man. I t does not confine itsclf to cooking; it makes things
crisp and cnmchy. lt puts the golden crust on the griddle cake; it gives
material form to man's festivities" ( I 5). Even when it is functional, when
used for cooking, fire always delivers an extra pleasure - "it makes things
crisp and crunchy?'
The possibilities for the meaning of fire, Bachelard pointed out, are
limidess: "Fire is both cookery and the apocalypse" ( 7). In the context of
Eisenstein, however, fire is freedom from static form , freedom from logic
and cognitive thought; it is anti-aud1oritarian, and, with its built-in interdiction, its danger excites disobedience, even crime.
There is a further emancipation in fire's reverie, which, like the alienating evolution from the hearth fire to the electric lightbulb, is specific to the
conditions of modernity. This is the emancipation from labor's fatigue,
labor that so confounds d1e senses and so destroys intimacy that such a
ntrn toward d1e animated light becomes not only a form of reverie, extasis, but also intimacy. In Schivelbusch's Disenchanted Night, the hearth
fire, which is the original site of reverie and intimacy, is displaced by the
sobriety and dispersion of electric lighting. Schivelbusch sees the turn
toward the light of the cinema as a lonely one for a bereft, modern subject:
"The illuminated sccne in darkness is like an anchor at sea. This is the
root of the power of suggestion exercised by the light-based media since
Daguerre's time. The spectator in the dark is alone with himself and the
illuminated image, because social connections cease to exist in the dark.'' 22
Although Schivelbusch may have film theoretical and psychologicalliterature in mind to support rl1e notion that "social connections cease to exist
in the dark;' this statement rings hollow. For darkness, even as it is evoked
131
Reverie
Savage Theory
132
a check torn by a smile. Waiting for thc moment whcn r,ooo meters of intrigue
converge in a muscular dnoztement satisfics me more than the rest of the film.
Muscular preambles ripplc beneath thc skin. Shadows shift, tremble, hesitare.
Somcthing is being decided. A breeze of cmotion tmderlines the mouth with
clouds. Thc orography of the face vacillatcs. Seismic shocks begin. Capilla!]'
wrinklcs ti)' ro split the fault. A wave carrics them away. Crescendo. A muscle
bridles. The lip is laced with tics like a thcater curtain. Evel)rthing is movement, imbalancc, crisis. Crack. The mouth givcs way, like a ripe fruit splitting
opcn. As if slir by a scalpel, a kcyboard-like smilc cuts laterally inro the comer
ofthe lips. (9)
Cinema too can produce the Aames' amorphous star pattern of associative
thought, justas it re-creares, albeit in darkness's isolation, quiet's secrecy,
and in the crowd's public space, the intimacy wc associate with gathering
round the tire.
Fire's final seduction, of course, is bound to its initial interdiction.
Bachelard cites the self-immolation of moths ro flan1es in George Sand's
Dreamers Story, itself a slow-motion scenc in close-up: ''Why have l not
thc eyes of an ant in arder ro admire this burning birch log? With what
transports of blind joy and of love's frenzy these swarms of littlc white
moths come to hurl themsclves into it! For them this is the volcano in alJ
its majesty. This is the spcctacle of an immense conflagration. This dazzling light intoxicares and exalts them as the sight of the whole forest on
tire would do for me."26 The "true axis" of this "magnifying reverie" for
Bachclard is the unity of "death, !ove, and tire." This description of someone watching minute creatures and rcacting on a larger human scale hits
upon the final theme that binds tire ro attracted spectatorship, which les
in its cxcessive na rore. "The lesson taught by tire is clear;' wrote Bachclard:
"After having gained all through skill, through !ove or through violence
yo u must give up all, yo u must annihilate yoursclf" ( 17).
The exccssive nature of fire u pon which Bachclard insists, and ro which
Lyotard connects Anemic Cinema, the cinema that is beyond good and
e vil - this sterilc burning- is a relcase from the repression of usefulness.
Bachelard invokes Aztcc sacrifice, borrowing Giono's likewise hyperbolic
prose. Such is the urge "among the Aztecs, among people whose religious
philosophy and religious cruelty have rendered anaemic to the point of
total desiccation so that the head has become mercly a globe of pure
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134
intelligence" ( 17- r 8). "Only these intcllccnlalized peopk:' says Bachelard, "these individuals subjected to the instincts of an intellecn1al;' and
here he cites Giono's Les Vmies Ri.chesses again, "can force the door of the
furnace and en ter into the mystery of the tire" ( 18).
Self-annihilation destroys the working body- its utility- altogether.
Labor destroyed intimacy "from thc starr:' according to Bataille, whether
it was slave or wage labor, because it parceled out pcoplc so that they
became things, mere parts of a scheme, and so destroyed their life's immediacy whilc working. He writes: "The introduction of labor into the world
replaced intimacy, the depth of desire and its free outbreaks, with rational
progrcssion, where what matters is no longcr thc truth of the present
moment, but, rather, the subsequent results of operatums. Once the world
of things was posited, man himself beca me onc of thc things of this world,
at least for the time in which he labored. It is this degradation that man has
always tricd to escape. In his strange myths, in his cruel rites, man is in
search of a lost intimacy from thc first."27 By binding oneself to labor's
"operations:' which involves effacing the prcscnt, one becomes a mere
thing, justan element in an operation. The "cruel rites;' whose sum and
substance must be expenditure, inutility, excess, pcrform the intimacy that
is lost through such routinc degradations of the soul.
It is labor's useful, material product that makes it so arduous and so
soul-destroying. Even subsistcnce farming, where the worker is bound
neither to wagc nor market, is drudgery in this sense. The following tale
shows the change in attitude toward gardening when the fruits of labor
were reduced to serve a utilitarian rather than an excessive purpose. When
Donald Tuzin revisited the New Guinea villagc ofllahita many years after
his fieldwork in the carly seventies, he found, among the many dramatic
changes that occurred bccause the men had destroyed their secrct cult, a
shift toward more efficient farming: "One important casualty was the male
prestige complex centercd on the production, display, competition, and
exchange of long and short yams. Apart from the loss of peri<>Qic cxcitement and pageantry, thc change removed the cultural incentive for the
production of food surpluses."28 Beca use thc yams had lost their cultural,
ceremonial function, far fcwer yams were cultivated. Tuzin reports that
now, instead of the competitive overplanting and its attendant magical
practices, people mercly plant yams for food: "People now plant only
according to estimated subsistencc necds, having recent!y decided that
Reverie
Europcan missionaries werc corrcct aU along in insisting that thc surpluses werc wasteful and their purposcs evil. The men now accept that thc
compctitions fueled by the surpluscs were socially dismptivc, which is
much lcss than half true, and that thc magic used to grow the yams was
heathcnish, which is tme only in a name-calling sensc" (34). Thc most
bitter conscqucnce of the yam's reduction from ritual to victual function is
the way pcoplc now feel about laboring in the garden: "Onc intcrcsting
consequence of tl1is change is that gardcn work was converted from meaningful cndcavor into unredeemed drudgery. In tl1e past pcople at work
would sometimes rcmark 011 how hot it was, but never would they complain about thc work itself. Today, complaints about gardening are frequent. People resent the labor, even though today's gardens are smaller
and shabbier than bcforc, and the time spent in them is clearly much less"
( 34). In this sense, alllabor that is slave to utility alone is slave labor.
The samc sort of loss occurs as light, in the form of raw fl.ame, is contained and metered out by clectrical means. Schivclbusch writes: "Thc
open fl.ame of gaslight linked it, however distantly, with the old uniry of
tire and light, but no rcminiscence of this lingercd with the incandescent
clectric light. According to Bachelard, the incandescent bulb 'will never
allow us to dream the drean1s that the light of tl1e living oil-lamp conjured
u p. We livc in the agc of administered light.' " 29 Furthcrmore, such "administercd light" has a "sobering" cffect on that which it illuminates.
Although objects appcar more clearly, the lightbulb "fl.attens objects" such
that they lose their "poetic element;' says Schivclbusch. He draws the
foUowing illustration from an art historian who, during the air raids of
World War 11, was forced to use candlelight: "This is something that is lost
in clectric light: objects (seemingly) appear much more clearly, but in
reality itjlattens them. Electric light imparts too much brightness and thus
things lose body, outline, substance- in short, their essence. In candlelight objccts cast much more significant shadows, shadows that have the
power acruaUy to creare forms. Candles give as much light as things need
in order to be what they are- optimaUy, soto speak- and allows them to
reta in their poetic element" ( 178). 30 Witl1 the loss of the candle fl.ame's
shadows, which move such "that they have the power actually to creare
forms," things lose their substance. Rational, electric light reduces things
from their "poctic element" to what 1 would caU their functional element.
For Bataille, an overcast day had the same effect 011 tl1ings as did the
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Savage Tbeory
136
clcctric lightbulb. Thc absence of the sun's brilliance brings things more
clearly into view, or, as above, "objccts (seemingly) appcar more clearly."
Onc does not turn toward the sun nor is onc bcsotted by its impressive
illumination, so that one sees things in al! their duli utility. And justas the
poctic brilliance of things gives way to their functional element in such
undistracting light, so too, wrote Batailie, "slavcry brings into the world
thc absence of light that is the separa te positing of eaeh thing, reduced to
the use that it has."31 A barn, for exarnple, is just a barn that houses
animals; its redness does not shine, it has lost the sun's cxcessive halo of
inutility. Slavery casts this dull pall over all who so toil, as they are rcduccd
to mere use. To circumvent this reduction ro use, Bataillc wrote, "Light,
or brilliance, manifests the intimacy oflife, that which life deeply is, which
is perccivcd by the subject as being truc ro itself and as thc transparency of
thc univcrse" (56).
The ritual of Aztec sacrifice in flamcs represents consumption, rather
than production, par exccllcnce. Inasmuch as it excccds utility, it regenerares the intimacy lost to labor. Bachclard's and Lyotard's intcrdictions
against fire's utility, the attraction of Eisenstein's plasmaticness, and indeed the rcncwed attraction of the theory of attraction, stand against the
conccpt of utility. Bataille writes, "The victim of the sacrifice cannot be
consumed thc sarne way as a motor uses fue l. What thc ritual has thc virtue
of rcdiscovering is the intimare participation of thc sacrificer and the
victim, to which a servile use had put an cnd" (56).
Thc turn toward the light of the cinema is not thc dark, lonely one that
Schivelbusch dcscribed, but rather a return to fire's excess, in which "the
world of intimacy is as antithetical to the real world as immoderation is to
moderation, madness to reason, drunkcnness ro lucidity" (57). And here
wc can add ... as cinema is to reallife.
eH A P TER 1 o
Pyrotechnical Reproduction
When a Cuna Indian is very sick, thc curer takes illustrated magazines,
trade catalogues, and newspapers, and places them around the sick person's hu t. Then they burn the images, releasing their souls or purbas. The
souls of the burnt images then go about setting up a store or emporium
fuli of fascinating items. When the evil spirits come to invade the sick
person, they are so takcn by the show of wares that they do not enter the
sick person's body. Instead of killing the sick pcrson, the evil spirits, in
effect, go shopping. 1
Think of the animation of objccts and their power to distraer that was
unlcashcd by the Cuna's burning of phorographs as a cinema tic event. The
images, merely culled from old catalogues and magazines, themselves are
utterly arbitrary; they move from the reified object beyond commodity
fetishism with fire's speed. Not only are the photos hollowed out and
interchangeable, as in the case of reified images; not only do they serve as
ciphers, as in the case when fetish meaning rushes in apace with our
rapidly discarded things; but the spiritual incarnation of these photos has
the power to seduce attention, to attract and ro distraer, and in so doing
crcates its own world that competes so successfuliy with reality as to
shelter the real body from harm.
For the film theorists and films with which I dcal, the most critical
feature of cinema is, as Benjamn put it, "not what the neon sign says, but
the fiery pool reflected in the asphalt below."2 Not the image itself, but its
smoky second nature. This spectacular analogy of Cuna ritual to film
presents us with a modcl for the stmcture of the relationship of the film
image ro reality. The Cw1a purba is an exact copy, a spiritual double of a
thing or person. What is more, cverything- plants, animals, man-made
things- all have invisible spiritual copies of their physical bodics. 3 The
word that the first Cuna informant used ro describe the uses of what is
now called purpa4 and translated from Cuna into English as "spirit'' was
actually "image": ''Anywhere we want ro go for image we can go. Ifl want
ro go far up in the blue sea I can go thcre for image and I can go under
Savage Theory
138
Pyrotechnical Reproduction
not forget, at the same time, t11at sctting tl1ings on fire also partakes of the
ritcs of an adolescent prank, which Frampton, as the film shows, was
ccrtainly not above. The aim of this chaptcr, howevcr, is to demonstrate
thc manncr by which the fetish character of thc film image can be ignited
and reanimated as a dialectical image and thus truly become a modern
magical form.
nostalgia, a series of photos identical in size, narrated not by their own
story but by the story of me photo yet to come, movcs only when the fire
burns, the smoke twists and ntrns, and thc burnt carbon image quivers.
Language, spoken by a narrator, which emerges only at thosc moments of
burning, refers explicitly to times now gone, ro memories. But the language, which is a description of an image, refers to the funtre diegetic
time, to the ncxt image we will sce. By then, however, the time of tl1is
image will have passed. The film's story moves from thc beginning to
thc end of Frampton's history as a photographer, from "the first photograph I cvcr made with the direct intention of making art" to the narration that precedes tl1e fiL11's final imagc. Then, after blowing up a "tiny
detail" of a photograph over and over again, he was faced with an image
that "fills me with such fear, such utter dread and loathing, that l think 1
shall ncvcr dare to make another photograph again." He pauses, and,
ntrning the film over to me spectator, he says, "l.ook at it. Do you see
what l scc?" The final image is a complete exposure of black mat fills tl1e
entire screen.
This abysmal plenum, which haunts every partial exposure, is the unspeakablc residue stored in the thousands of dots t11at make a photograph.
lt is to the possibility of reanimating unintelligiblc, archaic nantre that lays
hiddcn, dormant in tl1e photograph that Benjamn and Kracauer ntrn as
thcy thcorize the redemptive powcr of film. Frampton's film produces
such a reanimation because of his rigorous engagcment with mis new
form, fuelcd perhaps particularly in nostalgia by his passion for temporality, which, as formerly pursued in photography, had run up against that
form's intrinsic limits.
Such an engagement, along with Frampton's written work on photography and history, provides favorable ground on which to illuminate
the tcrms Benjan1in and Kracauer sct in thcir discussions of phorography
and film for history's redemption. Whereas, for Kracauer, me photograph
was indeed capable of representing the reified world, it was through tl1e
139
Pyrotechnical Rcproductm
Savage Theory
140
cou.ld be characrerized as cinematographic, wirh its attention to the tableau of shop windows and bis explorarion of the interstices of disrraction.
As a documentary of Frampton's movemenr from phorography ro film,
nostalgia articulares, in a form tl1at is minimal, tightly ordered, overly
strucmred, and at the same time always subject ro me arbitrariness that is
conrrolled only by namre, many of tl1e filmic redemptive qualities Benjamn and Kracauer felt lay in store. Frame after frame, the disjunction
between sound and irnage, the chaos of tl1e burning, tlnvarrs our ability ro
creare a continuous narration. nostalgia nms on the tension between the
past and the present, between wild images and sure language. Its project,
illuminated by Allen Weiss, is ro work through a slice of Frampton's
personal history and thus perform mclancholia. 11 Weiss sees nostalgia and
melancholia as the same emotional condition, the latter of which can be
rearticu.lated from the more general, social term for psychoanalytic discussion. Melancholia is the work of cathexis and anticathexis from the many
objects and things that stand in for the lost object. For Freud, one of
melancholia's cmcial problcms was that you no longer know why you
miss tl1e person, or even who it is you pine for. In song form, it is easy
to understand:
M y old ftame,
Oh what became of my old ftame,
Even though 1 can't quite
Recall his name,
I just know I'll never be me same,
Till 1 find out whar became,
What became of my old ftame. 12
Billie Holiday's singing of this Sam Laslow and Arthur Johnston song
suggests not only the meaning of melancholia but the namre of its effect.
It is nota srrong passion. Ir abides. It flickcrs.
The object of melancholia, like the moment of the photograph, is lost.
In a similarly ephemeral fashion, the power of history for a "society which
strenuously attempts to appear ahistorical" 13 is also inchoate. The way the
photograph effaced histOI)' and context was a significant property of photography for Kracauer. This presscs ro the surface today as kitsch, with
nostalgia lying somewhere berwccn thc privare and the public and organized around both speakable and unspcakable hisrory. Although nostalgia
141
Savage Theory
142
is only about sorne small piece of one artist's manufacmred history, the
way Frampton uses film to address the problem ofhistory is instmctive. It
suggests that film can rework the irrecuperable past in ncw constellations
of meaning with a new temporality, however transitory, that is experienced in the present, and in so doing, it can bring time itsclf to lifc. The
abiding modcrn disease was the waning of experiencc, the loss of fclt time
and thc ascent of rcpresentation, or mediated experience. In rescuing the
experience of temporality, Fran1pton uses the cinema as a form of magical healing.
To Benjamin and Kracauer, history placed an abiding strain on representation, evcn and pcrhaps especially in those cases where history and context appear entirely absent, as in the static old photograph. Photographs
absorbed and contained time. For Kracauer, writes Heide Schlpmann,
"tmth occurs- if at all- only in the real m of naturc and only with the
advent of a new temporality which is no longer the temporality of historical linearity." 14 When Kracauer says naturc, Schlpmann explains, he
means that it occurs only in an earthly realm, in contradistinction to
Kant's Christian metaphysics, in which truth was considered to be beyond
an earthly realm. Placing tmth within namre brings it back to earth, but it
remains indcpendent of human subjectivity. Film, neither beyond the
carthly rcalm (for Kracaucr) nor dominatcd by human subjectivity, could
provide a vcnuc for such an understanding of truth. 15
Temporality was thc key feamre of the photograpQjc medium that informed Kracauer's film aesthetics, according to Miriam Hansen: "The
arbitrary photograph" could, to his mind, catch the alienated, historical
reality that masquerades as objective rcality and "render it strange." 16
frampton refers to the moving can1era's ability to catch otherwisc hidden
momcnts in his remarks on Ray Birdwhistell's filming of a schizophrcnic
child: "Birdwhistcll filmed the mother in the banal and repetitive act of
diapering the third child, a baby girl a few months old. Careful, frame-byframe analysis of thc cinema strip revealed that, during onc moment in thc
process, the mother appeared to give the child simultancous and comradictof)' signals, putting her in a confusing doublc-bind." Temporality in
thc scnsc of the movement of time that film can slow clown, stop, catch,
and examine is no less crucial for Frampton than it was for Kracauer.
Frampton remarks on this examination, "If there is a monster in hiding
he re, it has cunningly conccaled itself within time." Thc camera is a mecha-
Pyrotechnical Reproductum
nism that can rclease the monsters time has trapped. "If it is dragons we
scck:' wrote Frampton, "or if it is angcls, then we might reconsider our
despcrate searches through space, and hunt them with our can1eras, where
thcy seem to live: in the reaches of temporality." 17 For both Kracauer and
Frampton, the camera beats a path to temporality, which is nota sublime
but an earthly categof)', yet it escapes human subjectivity; it is the realm
of dragons and angels. Temporality is a magical realm, to be got at by
magical means.
With that ability to capmre time, to scck out angels and dragons, the
photographcr pcrhaps could makc a particular "incision" in time that
could recover and release somcthing from that instan t. Temporality, so far
prcdominantly a bestial domain, is nonethclcss time wc live and, more
problcmatically, try to represent. Thc impossibilit:y of satisfying that desire, of fixing a moment in time, maintaining its vitality, while living in yet
anotl1er moment, becomes tl1c subjcct of Frampton's nostalgia. He tl1Us
lays out thc stakes for his ncw form (cinema), whilc ritualistically dcstroying its predccessor ( photography) in his artistic carcer.
Benjamn prcsents an imagc that attests ro thc pcrilous namre of temporality with Klee's Angelus Novus. Thc angel, facing toward the past, is
being blown roward the futurc whilc hiStol]''s wrcckagc piles skyward in
front of him:
A Klee painting namcd "Angclus Novus" shows an angcllooking as though he
is about to move away from somcthing he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes
are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one picmres
the angcl of histOIJ' His face is turned toward the past. Whcre we perceive a
chain of evcnts, he sees one single catastrophc which keeps piling wrcckage
upon wrcckage and hurls it in front of his fcet. The angcl would like to stay,
awaken thc dcad, and make wholc what has been smashed. But a storm is
blowing from Paradisc; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that
the angcl can no longcr elose them. This storm irresistibly propcls him into thc
futurc to which his back is turncd, whilc the pilc of debris befare him grows
skyward. This storm is what we cal! progrcss. 1H
M y intcrcst he re is not so m u eh in thc carbon that sits silcntly in front of
your cycs - the "wreckagc" tl1at pilcs up bencath thc fcct of thc angcl of
histOf)'- but in temporality. Temporality is che smoke, d1e text, the "torsion"19 of the burning, which, though often thought dcstmctive, is also,
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SaPagc Thcm-y
144
after all, the rclease of energy. Release and destruction combine as the
exccss of ritual sacrifice as thc flames and smoke twist and turn ovcr d1e
distorted photograph. "Burning a photograph;' Philippe Dubois suggests, " is only an extension of d1c photographic process: the photograph
is a sensitive surfacc ( likc the soul) burned by the light that strikes it, and
gnawed from within by d1e very things that allow it to cxist: light and
timc."20 Both a compelling object of contcmplation andan elemental subject that can changc and destroy, the significance of firc is limidcss. Bachelard's observation d1at "Fire is both cookery and thc apocalypse" is particularly rclevant for a film that burns photographs on a hot platc. 21 Just as
relevant is Benjamin's assertion that when delving into thc secrets of moderniry - its technology, for instan ce- the archaic is never that far off. 22
Though all of thesc associations might serve nostalgia, frampton's connection of firc ro time is its central importancc to the film . The following
anecdote exemplifies Frampton's concern with their rclationship. Writing
about the problcm of representing rempo rality in his essay "lncisions in
History Scgments of Eterniry;' Frampton is captivated by thc story of a
race car driver whose car, going 6 20 miles per hour, went out of control
and "shearcd off a number of handy tclcphone polcs, topped a small rise,
rurned upsidc down, flew through the air, and landed in a salt pond" in
thc period of "so me 8. ~ seconds." Thc driver, Brccdlove, was unhurt.
Brcedlove madc a tape to record bis thoughts during those seconds. The
tape lasts an hour and thirt:y-five minutes. Still, Frampton says, Brccdlove
was condensing, curtailing, making an e\cn longer story short, ata ratio of
some "655 to one." 2 -~
frampton compares Breedlovc's temporal cxpansion to Proust, Joyce,
and Beckctt. But Brecdlove's most amazing remark, for Frampron, is what
he uttcred when he emerged from the wreckagc: "For my next act, I'll set
mysclf on fire" ( 99). The hour-and-d1irry-five-minute mo nologue is, in
some important way, d1at act o f burning. Perhaps burning is the condcnsatio n of the cxperiencc into carbon and its rclease in smoking words,
ncver quite adequate to the task. Or it is equally possiblc that Frampton
sees Breedlove's words as an alternative ro burning. Though 1 can ncver
adequatcly explicare what fascinated frampton about Breedlove's line, the
conncction berween setting something on fire (in this case, Breedlove's
own body) and the problcm of representing the eno rmit:y of what a seco nd conrains- temporality - is central ro an understanding of nostalgia.
Pyrotcchnical Rcproduction
The choice between burning, on the one hand, and baroque but always
inadeguate language, on the other, is a modcl for the representation of
past time that is usefu1 ro keep in mind as we rurn now ro a description of
the film itsclf.
Men are by nature tilers and inclincd ro cvcry calling, save that of abiding at
homc. - Pascal, Penscs
A photograph appears on the screen in silencc for about ten seconds
( although the time varies, it is usually just enough time rosee it and begin
to make sen se of it). The phorograph is on a hot plate. A half-interested
maJe voice begins to account for the phoro in the first person, giving its
place in time and space. The phorograph remains static during this descriptive portion of the narration. As ilie narration begins ro elaborare in
the form of anecdote, description, or formal analysis, the image begins to
burn. Shoots of flame and puffs of smoke narra te ilie narration. For examplc, when he refers to the gums and varnishcs of a minor rival, the flames
shoot up a little from the burning photo of a srorefront, which in rurn
looks like a cubist painting, with all of its reflections and paraphernalia.
Thc narration is a litde confusing because thc things he describes in the
photos aren't there. You feel you've misscd something. You'lllook closer
next time. The anecdote winds to a close, d1e burning ends, and the
carbo n flutters weakly over d1e hot coil in silcnce. This silence, accompanied by the spcnt image, lasts quite a whilc, almost as long as the
storytclling itself. With d1e appearance of the next phorograph it becomes
clcar iliat the task of setting d1e photograph to the sense of ilie words is
less difficult than it secmed- it is impossiblc. The text refers, not to the
image befare you during the story, but to d1e next image. The image that
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146
Pyrotechnical Reproduction
film, is the happiest memory, the photograph that "pleases me as much as
anything 1 did." None of the normal dissatisfaction with eithcr thc photo
or the event mark this story. If only in double negative, the memory
abides: "James Rosenquist and I live far apart now, and wc seldom meet.
But 1 cannot recall one moment spent in his company that I didn't completely enjoy." The photograph is almost ecstatic in thc spiraling movement of spattered light, as clase to motion as any photo can be. Like a still
from von Sternberg's Der Blaue Engel, it is stuffed full of things; at least
three sources oflight stretch the photograph's dimension far back into the
room but also push its subject toward that space in front of thc fran1e. The
sour notes (the job was a "washout" and ''we seldom meet'') foreground
the temporality of such ecstasy.
The next three photos aren't portraits but refer to ideas. Frarnpton was
taken with the photographs ofLartique: "I wanted to makc photographs
as mysterious as his, without, however, attempting to comprehend his
wit." Though it is the only photo in the film that has words in it- "1 like
m y new narne;' printed on a dusty window- its meaning is mysterious.
Mystery is overturned in the next story, which burns this "difficult'' negative, with an iconographic study of t:wo toilets. lnterpretation surrenders
to time and narure in a frarne from a very slow stop-action series, a photo
of moldy Franco-American spaghetti he selected out of a series that records the decay of the spaghetti over a period of two months.
The next to last image in the film is a found photograph from a newspaper. He works through this photograph in three ways, first as a photo of
a pcrson without a living referent, like the alUstoric, old photograph in the
hands of strangers in Kracauer's srudy of photography: ''A srubby, middleaged man wearing a baseball cap looks back in matter-of-fact dismay or
disgruntlement at the carnera. It has caught him in the midst of a display of
sphercs, each about the size of a grapefruit, and of sorne non-descript
color. He holds four of thcm in his cuppcd hands. The rcst secm halfsubmcrged in water, or else lying in something like mud. A vague, mottled
mass behind the crouching man suggests foliage."25 In the iconographic
study of the two toilets, narure was ignored for referents in quite different
time and space. In thc photo of spaghetti, the passing of time and the
growth of mold was recorded as an abstraer image and refers mainly to
itself. But this photo has no contcxt, no reference at all, Frarnpton claims.
lt is a photograph without a history. For Kracauer, the ahistorical photo-
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Savage Theory
148
P_vrotechnical Reprodttction
Nature's vast heavens or its most tiny progeny, which puts man, both a
small speck within infinity and a body that contains still another infinite
universe, in a state of eternal homesickness, to which one can only be
resigned, finally, through God: "We sail over a vast expanse, ever uncertain, ever adrift, carried ro and fro. To whatever point we think ro fix and
fasten ourselves it shifts and leaves us; and if we pursue it escapes our
grasp, slips away, Aecing in eternal Aight. Nothing srays for us. That is our
condition, natural, yet most contra')' to our indination; we have a burning desire to find a sure resting place and a final fixed basis whereon to
build a tower rising to the Infinite; but our wholc foundation cracks, and
the carth yawns to the abyss. Let liS then cease to look for security and
stability" ( 25). Pascal was preoccupied early on not only witl1 disproving
thc sccure notion tl1at Nature abhors a vacuum but more important, with
challcnging the rcigning ideas that follow that notion - the need itself to
scc Nature a plenum. The image tl1at bcgins his declaration of the faitl1
rcquired, that accepts the possibility of a void in Nature, that accepts
man's eternal homesickness, is tl1at of Fire. 30
The final image of the film is a black photograph. 31 This is the enlargement of a twice-refl.ected speck, tl1e "tiny dctail" Frampton saw when
dcveloping a photograph that he dcvelopcd ovcr and over again. This is
the image that, the narrator says, "fills me with such fear and such dread
that 1 think 1 shall nevcr darc to makc anothcr photograph again." This is
an enlargement of one of the millions of dots Kracauer must ignore rosee
thc diva, thc wavcs, and thc hotel bcginning his essay on photography.
Hcre, Kracauer imagines using a magnifying glass and sees "the millions
of littlc dots that constitutc the diva" on thc cover of an illustrated magazine. 32 In Kracauer's terms, the black speck would represent history's residuc, which so defies representation within thc limits of photography. In
the story of the film, Frampron approaches the taking and reproduction of
the final image cautiously and obsessivcly. This stubborn spcck is the
unsecn, uncontrollable time and space that, when exposed, even magnified, persists as black residue.
If tire is the signature of faith and redemption in a world haunted by
infinity, by epistemic melancholia, and if the temporality of film portends
our modern rescue, this black speck, the literal representation of the unfilled, unfillable vacuum of what persisten ti y resists capture, is surcly the
imprint of modernity's hell. So thc vicwer sits, perched precariously be-
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150
rween the temporaliry of fire's burning and its narrative score, and the
continua! reminder of silence and burnt carbon.
The anonymous photo's text, whose explication ranges from a news
item to a philosophy, is but an extreme examplc from nostalgia that will
neither fix meaning nor den y it. In this film, however, this is more significant than generic avant-garde insouciance. Thc context of the photos, and
thus history itself, is both shifting within and essential to the film's form.
This shifting is part and pared of the stories Fran1pton te lis, the lumps he
takes as he rcn1rns borne. Think how trite, indeed how wrong, a film on
nostalgia would be that, for example, told those tales while thc "correct''
image burned. That would suggest, simply, that thc experience of thc
narrator was there once and now is gone. This is not unlike what happcns
in the final image of Citizen Kane, where the mystery word peels and burns
and history and meaning go up through the chimney in diegetic smoke,
leaving viewers with the scnse that they grasp something that is otherwise
irretrievable. That mnemonic bonfire, its referents already fixed into the
fi lm, produces pathos. Only a heavy organ pedal is lcft ro settle the scorc,
lcaving merely the notes' resonance ro register the far trickier issue of
what remains.
Frampton's method, by contrast, casts doubt on what was there, unfixes
the image from its story, and places the story, which is, after all, a narra ti ve
form in the present, in constant peril of being subsumed by thc burning
image ( that is, the past). In this, the film not only enacts nostalgia and
melancholia but shock as well. The state of constant peril in which the
spectator's ability to contemplare is mercilessly, repeatedly placed, produces such anxiety that a "breach in the shicld against stimuli" 33 renders
him or her vulnerable ro the film's tactile ballistics. Another viewer describes the film's effect on him: "The end result [ of the cntire film] is the
ruin of representation and a fascinating experiment in time. The psychic
effect produced by the continuous viewing of thc photograph's autoconsumption is intense, as if we felt physically that this carbonization of
mcmory-images wcrc actually taking place. We are lcft with the shrivclcd
fragments of a life that in the cnd is little more than ashcs. Something
irreparable has happened bcfore our very eyes."34
Constantly shifting between moments of intangibility and dcstruction,
silcnce and the frenzy of language, thc film's simple, albeit confounding,
structurc is unstablc, nervc-wracking, exhausting. Like me central nervous
Pyrotechnical Reproductum
system ( which Frampton refers to as a constant in his autobiography, as
opposcd ro his body, which has been replaced more than once), tl1e film is
"first system, then nervous." The nervous system itself, Taussig tells us, is
no more stable: "A common impulse in cpistcmic panic is to run for
biological cover, to escape from the whirlygigging of the N s: first nervous,
then a system,- nerve center and hicrarchy of control, escalating to the
top-most echclon, the very nerve center, wc might say, as high as the soul
is deep, of the individual sclf."35 Nonetl1eless, in citing the nervous system
as a constant, Fran1pton is repeating a biological verity: "Thc tissue is
irreplaceablc. lts ce lis are unregenerative." And of COllrSe most of the other
cells of the body ( but by no means all) are regencrative. More exactly, if
less poetically, Frampton would be left with quite a few spccialized organs
and his nervous system. 36 But his attraction to the nervous system is
obvious. As Taussig maintains, "Even while it inspires confidencc in the
physical centerfold of our worldly existence- at least tlut such a centerfold truly exists- and as su eh bespeaks control, hierarchy and intelligenceit is also (and this is the dan111cdest thing) somewhat unsettling to be
centered on something so fragile, so determinedly omcr, so nervous."37
The nervous system is a constant reminder of me ephemeral nature of
temporality. The film's fatiguing tension, however, cannot be accounted
for without the virtual battle it cnacts between words and images. Languagc creares this nervous tension. Strife between words and images
scems to be a premicr fea tu re of melancholia, of homesickness.
An extended, more visually luscious, but hardly more restful version of
this san1e tension can be seen in }an1es Benning's North on Evers ( 1984),
which, like nostalgia, could be looked at as a curing trip. In this film,
Benning records a trip tl.1at he made on a motorcycle, filming the people
and places that are his past, riding from his present home in California to
his past homes in New York and Wisconsin and back again. Instead of a
speaking sound track, he craftcd a strip of handwritten text o ver the filmstrip. This he calls "tl1e road" for a road movie that otherwise has no road.
Benning's refusal to put in the road, I think, is very similar to Frampton's
not burning the correct images to the text. There is also atemporal mismatch with the words of the text, which describe things we ha ve not yet
seen, but the road itself would ha ve been wrong regardless, for nostalgia is
nota simple journey backward. It's me pall of tl.1e past on the present.
Like Bachelard's "little Prometheus," Frampton is also breaking a taboo
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Savage Themy
152
with his fires. "Bomb the Museum!" he once said. "I will part gladly with
the work of five years, into the bargain."38 The burnt images represent
photographic work from six, not five years ofFrampton's career; however,
his sacrifice of his own work pales by comparison to the destruction he
metes out. Likc dadaists and surrealisrs bcfore him, Frampton disapproved of the elevation of art. "Carl Andr, old friend;' he said, "l here
ace use you of bclieving that arr, first and foremost, should be ele\'ating. I
suggest instcad that we eleva te ourselvcs."39 His trcatment of thcsc fcllows
in the film, not only Andr but Stella, the namcless painrer upstairs in his
building, and C\'en Roscnguist, amounts to a dadaist assault. He burns
their paints and varnishes, steals their girlfriends, and takes ridiculous
picwres of them. Frampron's venntre into sculpntre, for example, A Cast
ofThousands, whose unveiling before a neighboring couplc resulred in an
outrageous kiss from rhe attracrive girl and the displcasure of her boyfriend, amounts ro a silly joke.
Frampton makes sport of or otherwise defaccs all the plasric arts, yer
he !caves written forms unscathed. He aligned himsclf with Duchamp
and, more specifically, his attention ro language: "The rumor anyway that
my mother's name was Rrose Slavy is substantially correct, and 1 thank
she has something to reach us al! abour the inrimacy of the ties between
language and perception."40 Most odious to Frampron about abstraer
expressionism, specifically, was the elevation of art over language: "The
terms of the indictment [by the painters of the 'sos and '6os] were clear:
language was suspect as the defender of illusion, and both must be purged
together, in the interest of a rematerialization of a tradition besieged by
the superior illusions of photography. Only the poetics of the tide escaped inguisition, for a time."41 That the monologue in nostalgia always
coincides precise! y with the imagc's destruction acts as a kind of retaliation
for the primacy of the image brought to a head with abstraer expressionism: words burning images. This linguistic arson goes a long way to
redress the primacy of the image and tries to reinstate language, not only
language as expression and language that might reduce mythic artistic
authoriry but also language as a tactilc force, albeit a monotonous force,
inro artistic practice.
The rewrn of language to art pracrice in itsclf does not bring with it
the clear calm of reason. lndeed, as discussed in chaprer 2, cinema was
thought to solve problems of expression by forgoing language altogether.
Pyrotechnical Reproduction
By putting in words that compete with the image, Frampton is pushing
the limits of filmic expression, not mere! y ro do so but because the subject
requires it.
Frampton freguently articulares tl1e tension between customary dirty
language and the apparently pure images that early theorisrs had hoped
film would sort out. In addition, words and images share a common
problem: time. Neither photography nor writing can rcpresenr the presenr. Although one could argue that thc rension between languagc and
image and berween present and pasr are rhe abiding concerns of al! writing, thc particular way this tcnsion operares as the motor force in both
Fran1pton's and Bcnjamin's writing on hisrory illuminares the inadeguacy
of rhinking abour hisrory as a continuum as well as the sheer futility of
simply wriring ir out sequentially.
Among the many similarities between the problems Benjamin and
Frampton encounter regarding language in general, tl1ey both make the
same sort of remark abour their subject's- tl1at is, history's- specific demands. Frampton inserts a comment thar simply regisrers the difficulty of
the task: "At times, [ hisrory] seems impervious to languagc~'42 Frampton
complains that while he sirs and wrires about history he cannot, ar the
same time, convey the window out of which he looks nor the desires he
compresses. " lnstead;' he says, "I am enmeshed in tl1ese words. But I can't
find the words to tell yo u whar it is like ro be writing them" ( 97).
Like fran1pton, Benjamin often refers ro the process of writing and
making history at the same time. In "' [N]' Theorerics of Knowledge,
Theory of Progress;' he tries to incorporare the moment of writing into
the text: "Say something about the method of composition itsclf: how
everything that comes to mind has ar all costs ro be incorporated into the
work one is doing at tl1e time. Be ir that its intensity is thereby disclosed,
or thar from the first, the ideas bear tl1c work witl1in them as telos. So iris
with the present [ text], which should characterize and maintain the intervals of reftection, the distanccs bet:wecn the mosr intensively extroverted,
cssential parrs of the work~'43 Benjamin's continual insisrence thar the
form of the work be the nerve center of mea.ning makes it crucial that thc
process of wriring abour hisrory be written into thc nexr. Both Fran1pton
and Benjamin pause freguently to a.lcrt the reader ro the author's task.
Often this ta.kes the form of a preoccuparion with windows, the desirc
promptcd by the languagc-free world of images thar is only to be compli-
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154
cated by tbc knowledge that thosc images are always, in an urgcnt way,
ladcn with languagc. Both texts are driven by the tension ben'leen the
primacy of tbe incboate image on the one band, and tbc power of language to fix meaning on tbe other. Tbe window, for examplc, that Frampton wants to write into bis scbolar's study "and escape through it into
the sunshine of an abrupt summary'' suggests the abiding seduction of
the image. But tbe written window, which displaces that othcr window
through which Frampton looked to find images, is inadequate and injurious to the complexities of meanings he thinks and sees. Benjamn looks
out a real window that he keeps free from the fcttcrs of language: "the
glassed-in spot in front of my seat at the State Librar-y; a space never
violated, terrain vierge for the souls of figures I conjurcd up" ( 2).
In tbc midst of their seduction by lucid language, tbey both voicc the
necessity to refrain from violating the image. Frampton voices his "irrational suspicion" of language in referencc to Diane Arbus's pbotograpbs:
"Freaks, nudists, transvcstites, masked imbeciles, t\'lins and triplets, inbabit an cncyclopedia of ambiguities buricd so far bmeath language that we
feel a familiar vague terror at the very suggestion of bcing askcd to speak of
thcm ... an irrational suspicion that, should we ever find and uttcr a
name for what thcsc images mean to us we would so profane them that
thcy might vanish like Eurydice, or fall to dust." 44 In nostalgia, the profaned image, the burnt photograph spent by languagc that quivers in front
of us, registers this fall precipitated by language. That this is thc same
language that Frampton now chooses to write but that also served as a
weapon against the authority of the image accOlmts for the most dcvastating sense of "torsion" in the film as well as the pcriodic allusions to fire,
smoke, and violencc in bis text. This torsion of language on imagcs and
images on words is complctely caught up in that orl1cr torsion 1 spoke of
carlier, that of the past turning on the prcsent while the present turns on
the past. Bod1 Benjamn and Frampton mean to harness this past/ present j language/ image torsion's power.
Benjan1in and Frampton, both concerned with pulling images out of
"historie time;' articulare that action as awakcning. Returning to Proust,
Benjamn writes, "Justas Proust begins his life story with waking, so must
ever presentation ofhistory begin with waking; in fact, it sbould deal with
nothing else."45 In turn, thinking of Joyce, Fran1pton writes, "Even James
Joyce, the most ardent of newsreel devotees, said that history was a night-
Pyrotechnical Reprodttctm
mare from which he was trying to awake."46 Their shared aversion to continuous, bistorical time sets them looking for a way to shock moments,
imagcs, ideas, monads out of that time and hold rl1em in an instant. For
Frampton, "lasting an1Usement" and "sustenance" are achieved in the
awakening toan "alternare and authentic temporality of ecstasy." He goes
on: "lt is obvious that historie time, though quite well suited to the needs
of matter, is a terrain too sparse to afford the mind any lasting amusement
or sustenance. So we must dear out, stand asid e, and enter, if we can, the
alternare and authentic temporality of ecstasy. 1 assume rl1at everybody
knows what that is" (96). In the spirit of Frampton's melancholia, temporality's foil, it is tempting to reply, I wish 1 did. For Benjanun, no
stranger to melancholia, waking was no lcss revolutionary and equally
lofty. He begins section "N" of d1e Passagemverk with a line from one of
Marx's letters: "The reformation of consciousness les solely in our waking
tbe world ... from its dream about itself."47 In nostalgia, Frampton wrests
the image out of its place in a historical continuum, out of the "infinite
cinema" to then "arrest consciousness and suspend its objects of contcmplation, outside the ravages of entropy."
Waking and burning, shocking and blasting-clearly history's demands
on representation are violent and urgent ones to Fran1pton and Benjamn.
And all this for a representation d1at is only transito!)': "The dialectical
image is like lightning. The past must be hcld like an image Aasbing in the
moment of recognition. A rescue thus-and only thus-achieved, can
only be effected on that wbich, in the next moment, is airead y irretrievably
lost" ( 21). This passage from Benjamn suggests, in one bighly condensed
burst, d1e important affinity for fiery history that Frampton shares. But,
unlike "thc prophet's gaze, which cate bes fire from the summits of the past''
( 2 r), d1e fire here comes from old pbotos. Tbc film is both a systematic
rationing out of these images, to be tmderstood in tbe context of a text now
bardly completely recoverablc but nonetheless assimilable through memory and curiosity in a rough manner to the ncxt image, and a nervous play
of mnemonics. Tbe ungovernable way in which a burn coincides with a
text enacts the erasure of one meaning and the rcencha.ntment by another.
Benjamn puts a portian of a lctter from Adorno, busy trying to rearticulate the concept of a dialectical image in no-nonsense prose, into the
Passagemverk. Adorno's recapitulation separares the concept into stages in
a way that would never ha ve tempted Benjamn, but these stages are useful
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Savage Theory
156
not only to explicare the concept but to see how, with their tcmporary
clarity, Frampton's use of the photographs in nostalgia can approach the
stams of dialcctical images and thus illuminate a new sort of lifc, or afterlife, of objects.
Benjamin's quotation from Adorno begins with an account of the object's descent from use value to exchangc and reification: "As things lose
their use valuc, they are hollowed out in their alienation and, as ciphers,
draw meanings in." Moving quickly from their short-lived, hollowcd-out
object stams, Adorno then characterizes their fetishization, or their second namre: "Subjectivity takes control of them, by loading them with
intentions of wish and anxiety" ( 6). Frampton uses onc photo ro stand in
for another by inserting a photo whose meaning has already been spent in
front of us whilc we listen to the story of another photo. Quite literally,
"things stand in for other things." Fran1pton then takes control of them
with his text and loads them with "wish and anxiety" (7). for example,
whilc the text expresses regret about using lettering inappropriate to a
photographed postcr for an exhibir by Michael Snow, thc text reads, "I
wish I could apologize to him for that:'48 This is but a very literal example
of the wish and anxicty that recur in the text as well through the dismrbing
smoky form the image takes on during its narration. Adorno further characterizes fetishization: "Because the dead things stand in as images of
subjective intentions, these latter present thcmselves as originary and eternal!' At this point it is clear that Frampton, like Benjan1in, short-circuits
thc image's fetishization. Though Frampton loads his text with "wish and
anxiery;' he does not merely fetishize the image, for he docsn't attach
d1is ncw meaning-the text-to d1e image you see. Instead, he burns
that image.
It is at this point, the point of burning, d1e point of fetishization or
refixing the image, d1at Adorno's definition of d1e dialectical image can
begin. Benjan1in was trying ro theorizc ( and practice in writing) a way we
could harness d1e power of the fetish: "Dialectical images are constellations of alienated d1ings and thorough-going meaning, pausing a moment
in the balance of death and meaning."49 His definition articulares an apt
description ofFrampton's burning, then quivering, imagcs. The alienated
d1ings ( the photographs) are momcntarily caught in the balance bctween
death ( burnt carbon) and meaning ( its story, which lays waiting in the
next sequence along with its replacement). In d1is lin1inal stage, the burning image is balanced in a "constellation of new meaning."
Pyroteclmical Reproductzon
This new and transitory meaning is governed by the all but arbitrary fit
of thc irrclcvant text to thc photo, and also thc vcry direct materiality of
Aames and smoke. The mcaning produced hcre relies on the temporality
of this complcx conjunction or, in other words, on d1e properties of cinema itsclf. The film is hyperfilmic in these instances, relying on the tension
betwcen movement and time as well as language's narration. Even cinema's reproducibility has a particularly double-edged significance in this
film's case. For the question remains whed1er the photos are really ever
burned, on the one hand, and if the film can ever real! y be reseen, on the
other. Frampton removes the very possibility of d1e distance contemplation requires, with his fiery assault and disjunction of narration to image.
He so confounds contemplation as to make d1e desire for cognition, not
normally associated with tactility, itself a palpable one. There is no moment when a photo can be considered wid1 its story, yet by using these
stories he repeatedly invokes d1e pleasure of such relaxing contemplation
only to deny it over and over again until the film's final frame. Por d1e
fatigued viewer, temporality is everything, with each and every frame.
The quick and barely containable act of burning is crucial to temporality- that is, the containment of a piece of language-laden, image-filled
time. Frampton's concern with temporality in this complex sense, like
Kracaucr's faith in a "new temporality;' is similar ro the dialectical tension
Benjamn wants to create between the past and d1e present with the dialectical image: "lt isn't that the past casts its light on d1e present or the
present casts its light on the past: rather, an image is that in which the past
and the now flash into a constellation. In other words: image is dialectic at
a standstill. For while the rclation of the present to d1e past is a purely
temporal, continuous one, that of d1e past to thc now is dialectical- isn't
development but image [,] capable of leaping out. - Only dialectical images are genuine (i.e., not archaic) images; and the place one encounters
them is language!'50
Adorno's distinct yet, in practice, simultaneous phases, illustratcs how
the power of the fetish could be harnessed to form dialectical images. This
seemed to Benjamn d1e most powerful way to renegotiate meaning in his
industrial age. He thus amended Adorno's passage when he placed it in
the Passagemverk with the remark, "In the contcxt of these reflections, one
must keep in mind that, in the nineteenth cenmry, the number of 'hollowed out' things increases ata pace previously unknown, because technical progress is continually putting more utensils out of circulation" ( 12).
157
Savage Theory
158
Frampton's concern, however, is not to refunction commodity fetishism. lt is both more general and more spccific. Frampton's images are
fetishcs of thc past. Like the commodity fetish, their meanings now bear a
different yet powerful relationship to thcir original and long gone context
whilc appcaring to ha ve non e at al l. Whereas thc dialectical torsion of the
film enacts thc same kind of temporalit:y that Benjamn theorizes and
Kracaucr dcmands, Frampton in his written work pits ccstatic, authentic
tcmporality against the ra\ages of "entropy" ( not against mythic authority) as artistic representation's abiding concern, "as if ro repudiare, in the
spasmodic single gesture of a revulsion only half-sensed, the wavering
concerns of painting, purifying and reclaiming for itsclf those perfected
illusions, spatial and tactile, which alone could arrest consciousness, and
suspend its objects of contemplation, outside the ravages of entropy."51
Entropy is a far less historical or political diffusion of meaning than the
alienation-charged mystification that concerned Benjamn. But for filmmaking and aesthetics, the way Frampton works language and images
away from cntropy toward temporality, and from photography toward
film, nosta{!fia could hardly be more so charged. Through his new medium, Frampton refunctions the "utensils" of artistic practice.
Amid the throes of technology's rapid acceleration, the task of rcfunctioning images and exposing disintegration was, for Benjamn, an urgent
one: "at once a consequence and condition of technology.... 'Thc world
of mcmory brcaks up more quickly, the mythic in its surfaces more quickly
and crudcly, a complete! y different world of memory must be sct up cvcn
faster to oppose it. That is how the accclcrated pace of technology looks in
the light of today's prehistory."'52 Frampton hits on the utopian possibilities of cinema while discarding photography in favor of cinema. In our
prcscnt clectronic age, which Frampton marks with the advcnt of radar, it
is inconccivablc that one could rework discardcd utensils a pace with technology. (AJthough it is possible to see Frampton's voracious master-y of
ever newer technologies' specific powers in that way.) Instead, Frampton
hones away at the crucial properties of cinema- movement, language,
reproducibility-and compounds its two modes ofperception: contemplative distance and tactile immediacy. By so producing that which most
evades consciousness- both cestatic temporality and its horrid inverseFrampton restores cinema's magical power ro curse and to cure.
Conclusion
to
Sm>age Theory
160
Conclusm
using the river for power, cooling, drainage, and sustenance and the canal
for transpon. For the river's ftow is too unstable, too much a victim of
nature to serve such industrial transpon. The canal, too calm, too lifeless
to sustain health and industry, depended on the river's water to regula te its
depth. Together, for some sevenry-five years, these two waterways provided resources to electrify the city, build its roads and bridges, warm its
citizens, and employ those who lived along tl1e way. lndeed, local lore
takes much pride in tl1e fact tlut our cement was transponed along tl1e
canal to build the Brooklyn Bridge. And Roebling himsclf can1e up tl1is
way to rebuild the canal's aqueducts, which at points traverse the tempestuous ri ver. The canal was a construction witl1 high costs in money and
poorly paid arduous labor. The traces that remain, fincly cut granite and
limestone fitted together like the stones of Macchu Pichu, inspire, as do all
such monuments that store effaced labor within, a similar kind of awe.
The river stiU has toxins as a result of its heavy industrial use.
Rather than thinking of a river that fiows in one direction somewhere
clse along which "the primitive" and "modernity" can be placed, no marter which is privileged, I prefer to think of these terms as a system, like the
canal and the river. Altl1ough the canal was constructed with money to
serve a material need, and the materials it carried changed dramatically
over this period beca use of industrial shifts, it nonethcless used the water
from the river and the stone from its bed. The canal prospered for almost a
century because of the continua! replenishment from river to canal and
canal to river. This systcm, with its sordid exploitation and its dazzling
cngineering, relied on unquestionably real things as well as on monumental construction in order to function. The system is now in shambles. The
canal has been filled in at places in favor of manicured lawns. The locks
nunble into disarray under large pylons built for high-tension wires that
zoom along the river's edge, for the power company had the foresight to
purloin tl1e corridor in which thc system had so prospered. Now 69,000
and soon r 2o,ooo volts run along the tow patl1 between the canal and the
river where donkeys dragged the canal boats carrying coa!. Progress follows a well-worn path. And inasmuch as modernity and the primitive
both represent socially real and carcfully servcd-up concepts tl1at work in
tandem, they too forma path that will not easily becomc overgrown. Like
the Brooklyn Bridge, thcir monuments are too useful and too beguiling to
escape continuous traffic and admiration.
There is no denying that cinema offers a safer passage tl1a11 reallife. But
161
Savage Theory
162
it also can travel farther over spatial and temporal distances. The canal is a
more serviceable alternative to the river, but it depends on the river's
material, its water and its stone, to deliver the goods in safety. The mins
that remain now, with tree roots pushing thc finely honed rocks apart,
confuse and tease at such an easy distinction not only between what is real
and what is made up but also what sort of val u e caeh has for us. lt is these
ruins' intertwining of the archaic and the modern that now fascinares. For
the naturc before second nature, the nature from which thesc monuments
were once so ingeniously fashioned, inevitably keeps pace with such dazzling feats of progress. Benjamn inserted the following extraer into his
"Theory of Progress": "The thoroughly transformed landscape of the 19th
century remains visible ro this day, at least in traces. It was shaped by the
railroad .... Wherever mountain and nmncl, ravine and viaduct, torrent
and funicuJar, river and iron bridge ... are intimately related, we find the
focal points of this historical landscape .... Curiously, they testify that
naturc did not sin k into namelessness or imagelcssness under the triumph
of technological civilization, and that the construction of a bridge or a
nmnel did not become the exclusive feature of the landscape; rather, the
river or mountain immediately rallied to their side, notas victim to victor,
but as a friendJy power.... The iron train entering the walled portals of
the mountains ... seems ... to be returning to its homcland, where the
raw materials le out of which it was made."2 Like a locomotive zooming
out of the mountain's tunnel bringing the iron ore with it, prehistory
breaks open on the modern world. Traversing the line bet:ween raw material and material film, pro-fiJmic and filmic, reality and make-bclieve, nature and second nature, light and shadow move on a square, white piece of
cloth. Like the locomotive, crafted in iron, that soars from the old to the
new, the camera, crafted as much by archaic bcliefs and desires as by glass
lenses, joins the primitive to the modern.
Cinema rescues all that experience allows, save risking the body. In so
doing, it provides a magical double with which directors can practice their
craft, manipulating the spirit world so as to affect the real counterpart.
In Frampton's combustion of photographs to produce temporalit:y and
Bresson's renewal of our sensitivity ro violence that is nearby, both of these
films, ro m y mind, touch endangered parts- not of the human body, but
parts of our consciousness and poetic capabilities with regard ro representation. I ha ve attempted to show how this is done by analyzing the deploy-
Conclusion
163
Notes
lnrroduction
propertie~ of film rhar are specific to thc form, the
capabilities that diiferenriare it from other forms such as slow, fast, and reverse
motion, pans and close-ups; the term was inrroduced into french film theory by
U>uis Delluc and further explored by French avant-garde filmmakers Germain
Dulac and Jean Epstein.
There is obviously a lot more to be said about this film about newsreel fakery and
cinemaric authenticity, directed by Harold Rossen and shot, in part, in Dutch
Guiana. However, none of the actors are Djukas, none of the dances are indigenous ro them, nor is their language or rin1al gear authentic. The canoes, paddles,
and hurs are authenric. SaUy and Richard Price, anthropologists who ha ve worked
in this arca for twenry years, poinred out these infidclities ro me and also remarked
that this film shows only Djuka men, whereas, they assure me, in reallife there are
women Djukas as well. Chaprer 3 discusses the deployment of primitives' reacrions ro modern rechnology in the cinema.
Jean Epstein, in "Bonjour ci11ma and Other Writings;' trans. Tom Milne, Afterimage no. 1o ( 1981 ), referred ro "the Bell a.nd HoweU" as a "metal brain" ( 14).
Given the properly refined analytical rools a.nd more modesr theoretical ambition
than has been customary, films and their workings can be explained, Bordwell and
CarroU assert, through logical analysis bascd on empirical data and sound reasoning. David Bordwell and Noel Carroll, cds., Post Theory: Rcconstmcting Film Studies (Madison: UniversityofWisconsin Press, 1996).
for a differenr ser of dissatisfactions to cognirive theory, see Richard Allen, Pmjecting Illusion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
Tom Gunning, "An Aesthcticof Astonishmcnr: Early f ilm and the (In )crcdulous
Spectaror;' Art & Text 34 ( spring 1989): 31 .
lbid., 43Christian Metz, The Imaginary Signifter, trans. Celia Britton et al. (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1982), 73. The quotes thar follow are drawn from
3
4
5
6
7
72-7 39
10
11
Marccl Mauss,A General Theory ofMag1c, trans. Robert Brain (New York: Norton, 1975), 19.
"On the contrary, conditions ara film-show induce the spectator ro fecl as if he
were in total isolation ... the speetator's condition is close ro solitary, intimare
conremplation- he observes, as it wcre, somebodr's dream" ( Boris Eikhcnbaum,
"Problems of Cine-St.ylistics;' in T11e Poetlcs of Cmema, trans. Richard Sherwood,
ed. Richard Taylor [ Essex: RTP Publications, 1982], 1o).
Guliana Bruno delineares this fcan1rc of spectatorship in the conrext of carly
Neapolitan cinema in "Strecrwalking around Plato's Cave;' October 6o (spring
Notes to Pages J-
166
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
Notes ro Pigll/2-6
12
1992). Clearly pushing aside a psycholanalytic understanding of a powcrless spectator, she argues for its cxteriority by analogy to the modcrn "panoramic gazc" as
well as its central position in thc public sphere. "founded on thc physical jemotional experience ofboth intimaC)' and collccti\'ity," shc wrires, "film spcctatorship
dwells on the bordcrs of interior1exterior. Ir offcrs 'an imagina!)' privare sphcrc
from rhc vanragc poinr of public space'" ( 124).
I cmploy thc rcrm mner speech as defined by Paul Willcmen, who dubs inner
speech rhe "frontier crearure;' "where the subjcctive and thc social are articula red"
("Cinemaric Discourse: The Problcm of Inncr Spccch," in Looks and Fnctums
[ Bloomingron: Indiana Univcrsiry Press, 1994], 52).
This description is a generalization from visiring curanderos in Venezuela, Colombia, Equador, and Peru over a ten-ycar period bcginning in 1983.
Maya Deren, "Notes on Ritual and Ordcal," Film Culture 39 ( winter 196 5): 1o.
Maya Deren, "An Anagram of Ideas on Art, form ami film," Film Culture 39
(winrer 1965): 20.
Ibid., 18-20, 26-29, 37-41 rcspectively.
Annette Michclson, "On Reading Deren's Not~:book;' October 14 (fall 1980): 49.
Sran Brakhagc, "Meraphors on Vision;' in The Ava11t Carde Film, cd. P. Adams
Sirney (New York: Ncw York University Pr<.:ss, 1978), 124.
Waltcr Benjamn, One Way Street, trans. Edmund Jcphcott and Kingslcy Shorter
( London: New U:ft Books, 1979), 114.
Vachcl Lindsay, TheArtoftheMoving Picture (New York: Macmillan, 1922), 32.
Georg Simmel, T11e Sociowgy ofGeorg Simmel, ed. and trans. Kurr H. Wolff ( umdon: Thc free Press ofGiencoe, 1964), 409-24.
Walrcr Benjamn, 1/luminatioJIS, trans. Harl)' Zohn ( New York: Schocken, 1969),
84.
E. E. Evans-Prirchard, Theories of Pnmittve R.eb.g101t (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1965); see, for example, 26-28. The book is a critique of theorics of primirive
religion as undcrstood not just by early anthropologists bur by the "grear mythmakers" of the last cenrury: Darwin, Marx-Engcls, Freud, Fra7..cr, and perhaps
Comte.
Ral Ruiz compares filmmakers to shamans in "for a Shamanic Cinema;' chapter 5 of his book, Poetics of Cinema, rrans. Brian Holmes ( Paris: ditions Dis
Voir, 1995). Like magic or witchcraft, the films that he considcrs shamanic are
"crafrcd," and he calls on one of the Spanish tcrms for sorce!)', hechizo, a preterir
form of hacer, "ro make," to enablc a d~:finition. S<.:c <.:sp<.:cially 74-18.
5
6
.,
11
12
13
14
15
16
1.,
18
19
Anson Rabinbach, The Human Motor: E11erg_y, Fatigue, and the Ongm~,\foder
nity ( Bcrkclcy: University of California Prcss, 1992).
Thomas Hardy, Far from the Maddi1g Crowd ( 1874; London: Pengum Books,
1985).
Thomas Hardy, Tess of the D'Urbervilles ( 1891; New York: Harper &Brothcrs,
1935),.p4.
for an account of the ascent of thc imagc, scc Anton Kaes, "Literar, lnreUecmals and the Cinema;' rrans. David I..c\"in, New Gemzan Critzqut ;; IIJnter
1987): 23-28.
For a smdy of the billboard advertisement, sce Marcus Verhagen, "Thc l'o,ter in
Fm-de-Siecle Paris;' in Cinema and the Imentzon of Modent Ufo, ed. !.ti" Charney
and Vanessa Schwartz (Berkelcy: University ofCalifornia Press, 1995
Karl Marx, "The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereot mlpztal,
trans. Samuel Moore and Edward Aveling ( New York: lnternational Publilhers,
1967), 76.
Noel Burch, "Primitivism and the Avant-Gardes:' in Narrative, AppaTII:UJ, ldeolog_v, cd. Philip Rosen (New York: Columbia University Press, T986},.8;-;o6.
Roger Shattuck, The Banqttet Yearr: The Origim ofthe Ava11t Garde itz fTIIna- 1sss
to World War I (New York: Vimage Books, 1968), 80-81.
!bid., 170-71.
Burch, "Primitivism;' 487.
See, for examplc, John Goldwatcr's 1918 pioneering and still authommrcltudv
of thc subject in Primitivism m Modenz Art (Cambridge, MA: Bclhup Pres;,
1986); and Willian1 Rubin's rwo-volumc book of essays that accomfllillahlarge
exhibition on thc topic, "Primttn>tsm" in zoth Cmtury Art ( Ncw York: ~llllCUin of
ModernArt, 1984).
Goldwater, Primitivism in Moden1 A rt, xxiv.
Jbid., XXV.
For a sustaincd attack on thc use of rhe primirive in the tcrm "modem pnnl1tive"
in art critical circlcs, scc Maya Dcrcn,AnA1zagram ofldeas 011Art, FunundFilm,
(Yonkcrs, NY: The Alicat Book Shop Prcss, 1946), 14-17. A similaranack is
lcvcled, with the specific cxample of comparing thc culruralmcaning ofll'arlpiri
acrylics in their tradicional verses with their markct valuc, by thc late Eric Michacls, "Bad Aboriginal Arr;' Art and Tcxt 28 ( 1988): 59-73.
M ichael Taussig, Shamanism, Colonialism and the WildMa11 ( Chicago: l:ru1ersity
ofChicago Press, 1985).
Richard Huelsenbcck, Memoirr of a Dada Dnmmzer, trans. Joachim :\tugr~hel
( Berkeley: Uni\ersity of California Press, 1991), ti 1-62. "This is probabivone of
the many manifestations in our time of the primiti\'istic tend<.:nC)' 1amrmunded
of the redisco\'el)' of Negro art, the drawings 111 the caves at Altamira andU~caux,
the rediscovel)' of children's arr, folk arr, and so on. All of this is in linn1th an
aesthetic and moral renewal."
Sce, for cxan1ple, Marianna Torgomick, Gane Primtttve (Chicago: Cru1mity of
Chicago Press, I 990). For a critique and corrective to Torgovnick, S .\lll]orie
Pcrloff, "Tolerance and Taboo: Modcrnist Primitivisms and Posttnodemist Pi-
167
168
19
eties," in Prehistoriesofthe Futttre, ed. Elazar Barkan and Ron.tld Bush (Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 1995 ), 339-54.
20 H a! fo ster, "The ' Primitive' Unconscious of M odern Art," October 34 (fall 1985):
+5-"'0; James Clifford, " On Ethnographic Surrealism," Comparatwe Studies in
SoCiety and H zstory 23, no. + ( Octobcr 198 1 ) : 5 W-6+.
21 Annene Michclson, "On Reading Deren's Notdxx>k," October 1+ ( fall 1980): +9
22 Clifford, "On Ethnographic Surrealism," 119.
23 !bid., 120.
24 These examples are mine, not C lifford's. I refer first to Richard Huelsenbeck's
dada sound poems using African drumming 111 Berlin 19 15 in Huelsenbcck,
.11-femozrr; second, ro Gcorges Bataillc's many uses of primiti,e cusroms such as
Aztec sacrifice and Kwakiutl potlatch ro reinterprct thc general economy in terms
of cxpcndirure and consumprion instead of scarcity and production in The Acczmed Share, trans. Robert Hurley ( New York: Zonc Books, 1988).
25 Instances of primitivcs looking at thc camera are often faked or forced by the
cameraman ro lend authcnticity ro the film, to show rhar rhc primitivcs werc real
primitives. Vinccnt Monnikcndam's filmMotber Dao the Jrtielike ( 1995, Nethcrlands) snmningly rcveals this in the Dutch footagc of Javancsc victims of colonization he reasst:mbled ro construct the film.
26 Judith Maynt: has produ<."tively worricd thc "primitivc" as regards both Burch's
and Gunning's contributions ro the modcrn refraction of rhe rerm ro investigare
thc ways in which- and she pointedly acti,att:s thc tcrm wirh seare quotes- the
connotations of d1c tcrm primitive infcn and cnli\en issues rhat emerge in a
considcration of women as filmed primiti\cs, spe<."tato r primirives, and filmmakcrs such as Maya Dcren, Trinh T. Minh-ha, and l.-alcen Jayamanne who deal
in primitivism. In this, shc is in a mino rity of schol;m who ha,e qucstioned
tht: innoccnct: of d1c tcrm, qucstioncd d1<: casy yt:t fundamental way " primiti,e
cincm.t" is commonly dcploycd intcrchangcably with "carly cinema." See The
Womm1 at the Keyhoie ( Bloomington: Indiana Univt:rsity Prt:ss, 1990), cspccially
introduction, chaps. 5 and 6, aftcrword.
27 Elazar Barkan and Ronald Bush, cds., Prebistories of tbe Futu~e: The Primitivist Projcct and the Cultun; of Modernism (Stanford: Stanford Univcrsity Press,
1995), 2.
Sergei Eisenstcin, Film Fonn, trans. Jay Leyda ( Ncw York: Harcourt Bracc Jovanovich, 1977), 143 - 45.
29 Sergci Eisenstein, Immoral Memories, trans. llcrbcrt Marshall ct al. ( Boston:
Ilo ughro n Miffiin, 1983), 200-203.
30 Naum Klcinman, introduction ro Eisenstem on Dtmey, ed. :-Jau m Kleinman, trans.
AJan Upchurch (London : Mcdmen, 1988), 2.
31 Eisenstcin, Film Fonn , 28-44.
32 71u 0/d a11d the New ( 1929 ),Que VuaMt::aco! ( 1 930-~ 1 ), Rezbm Meadow ( 193528
~.,.).
33 Ehenstcin, Ftlm Fonn, 122-49; Sergei Eisenstem, Nom ndiffermt Nnture, trans.
H erbcrt Marshall ct al. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987) .
34 Vachcl Lindsay, TheArtoftheMoving Picture (New York: Macmillan, 1922), 171.
35
36
37
Bla Ral?A~, Theoryofthe Film, trans. Edith Bonc ( Ncw York: Amo Press and New
York Times, 1972) , 50, 48.
Sce, for example, E. E. Evans-Pritchard, Theorics of Primitive Religion (Oxford:
C larcndon Press, 1965 ), in which he critiqut:s this notion as "rubbish" ( r o ).
Walter Benjamn, Illuminations, trans. Harry Zohn ( New York: Schocken, 1969),
236.
Georg Lukcs, History and Class Conscwusness, trans. Rodney Li\ingstone (Can1bridgt:: MIT Prcss, 197 1 ), 86.
39 I employ this term ro describe the body of theory that emerged arow1d thc
Frankfurt School, but 1 use the tcrm to include Kracaucr, Benjamn, and Lukcs,
who were not among its membcrs.
40 Gerrrud Koch, "Mimesis u.nd Bilderverbot in Adornos Asthctik;' Rabym, no. 6
38
(1989): 36- 45
41
42
43
44
45
46
169
170
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
October predares his reading of]oyce in 1928. Yer Eisenstein seems ro confiare Bcly
and Joyce as "impulses rowards rhe revision of thc narra ti ve technique of the film
medium." A primary characteristic of this influcncc, "from a bowl of soup ro the
Brirish vesscls sunk by England ( Eiscnstein rcfcrring ro Joyce] ; is one of clever
and imaginarivc, rather than meandcring and scnsuous associations. See "Eisensrcin and Russian Symbolisr Culn1re: An Unknown Script of October," in Eisenstein Rediscovered, ed. Jan Christie and Richard Taylor (London : Rourledge,
1993), 141-42.
Eisensrein, Film Fonn, r 30.
Inga Karetnikova, Me.xico According to EtSmstein (Albuquerque: Universiry of
New Mcxico Press, r991). See also Annctte Michclson, "On Reading Deren's
Norcbook," October 14 (fall 1980): 47-54; and Scrgci Eisenstein, "Letters from
Mexico;' trans. Tanaquil Taubcs, October 14 ( fal l 1980): ss-64.
Sigmund Freud, The Complete Psychological Wordr ofSigmtmd Frettd, ed. and trans.
James Srrachey (London: Hogarrh Press, 1975 ), 14:169.
Eisenstein, Film Fonn, 126.
Sir James George Frazer, The Goldm Bough ( London: Macmillan, 1976), part r,
vol. 1: 54.
Roma.n Jakobson, Language in Literature, cd. Krysryna Pomorska and Stephen
Rudy (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1987), 113. Thc essay "Two Aspccts of
Language and Two Typcs of Aphasic Disrurbances" in which he discusses this
conncction was written in 1956.
Both of thcse examples are in Eisenstein, Film Fonn, 143.
Luden Lvy-Bruhl, Hmv NatiJJes Think, trans. Lillian A. Ciare ( Salem, MA: Ayer
Publishcrs, r984), 77, 48.
Bal7..s, Theory ofthe Film, so.
Lvy-Bruhl, How Natives I11ink, 46.
Eisensrein, Film Fonn, 137-38.
Wilhelm Wundt, Elemmts of Folk Psychology ( London: Macmillan, 1928) , 69.
Eisensrein, Film Fonn, 144.
Frcud ,CompleteWorks, 14:171.
Eiscnstcin, Film Fonn, r 44.
Mikhail Yampolsky, "The Esscntial Bonc StrucUire: Mimesis in Eisenstein; in
Eismstein Rediscovered, ed. Jan Chrisric and Richard Ta.ylor ( London: Routledgc,
1993) , r8o.
Bcnjan1in, Selected Writings, 6 r; rhc cirations that follow in this paragraph are all
from 51.
See, "On Scmblance;' in ibid., 224.
Benjan1in, "On the Mimetic Faculry;' in One Wa.v Street, 160.
Sergci Eisenstein, Eisenstein on Disney, cd. Na u m Kleinman, trans. AJan Upchurch
(Ncw York: Methuen, 1988), 21.
Benjamin, "On the Mimeric Faculry;' 160-61.
Karl Marx, Ecotwmic m1d Philosophic Mmmscripts of 1844, rrans. Martin Milligan
(New York: Inremational Publishcrs, 1964), 1w.
Benjamn, in One Way Street.
171
11
1~
ill.
172
45
46
47
Sergei Eiscnstcin, Film Sense, trans. ]ay Lcyda (New York: llarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975), 14-15.
Benjamin, "On the Mimetic Faculty," 162.
!bid. "And just as the film docs nor prcscnt furnirure and fas:ades in complcted
forms for critical inspection, their i11s1Stent,)erk_v 11eamess alone bcing sensacional."
Walter Benjamin, Illuminations, trans. Han-y Zohn (New York: Schockcn, 1969 ),
62
198"'),
63
236.
48
49
50
51
52
Hansen, "Of M ice and Ducks;' 38. Herc she is citing thc first \'Crsion ofthe "Work
of Art" essay from Gesammelte Schriftm, 1 :445.
Annette Michclson, introduction ro Kmo-E_ye, by Dziga Vertov, cd. Annette Michclson, trans. Kcvin O'Bricn ( Berkelcy: Universiry of California Press, 1984),
xxxix.
The Donbass Spnphony (Symfoniya Donbassa); director, Dziga Vcrrov. Ukrainfilm 1930.
Bcnjamin, "On the Mimcric Faculry," 236.
Leon Trorsky, T11e H istory ofthe futssta1l Rn'Olution, trans. Max Eastman ( London:
Sphere Books, 1967), 1:376. "Leo Tolstoy looked deepcr into the soul of the
muzhik d1an anyone else." Trotsky goes on to compare the clevcr resistancc by thc
muzhiks in the carly days of rhc rcvolution to Tolstoy's idea of nonviolencc.
Leon Trotsky, M y Lije, trans. Max Eastman (New York: Pathfinder Prcss, 1971 ),
88.
Scrgei Eisenstcin, The Film Factory, cd. Richard Taylor and Jan Christic, trans.
Richard Taylor (Can1bridgc, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988), 257. Eisenstcin refcrs toa contcmporary slogan.
A KA The General Une (Sta roe i 1wroe) .
A. V. Chayanov, The 11;eory of Peasant Economy, ed. Daniel Thorncr ct al., trans.
Christcl Lanc and R. E. F. Smith ( Homcwood, IL: Irwin, 1966 ), 174-75.
In contrast ro thc clear incentives callcd for by d1c likcs of Chayanov, thc idcology
of thc film as wcU as its portrayal of collcctivc organizarion is obscurc, as David
BordwcU suggests in his analysis of thc film, The Cinema ofEisenstein (Cambridge,
MA.: Harvard Universiry Press, 1993), 106-7.
The Oldand the New coincides with thc cxtension ofthe "state farms' drive ro new
53 AKA
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
regions ro creare vcritablc cerc.tl factories, which were ro delivcr thc markerablc.:
surplus rhar was harder and harder ro obtain as rhc pcasant, lacking incentive,
retreared into his shell" ( ChavanO\', The Theory ofPeasa11t Economy, lx).
Sergei Eisenstcin, "Thc Milk Scpararor and the Holy Grail," in No11i11dijfcrent
Nnture, trans. Hcrbcrr Marsh,11l et al. (Cambridge: C.tmbridge Universiry Press,
64
65
66
668
w.
0,1\'id Rordwcll describes much thc samc shift in this sequencc, but emphasizes
insrcad rhe croricism of such liquid excess. Sce Thc Ci11ema of Eismstei11, 107-8.
This subtle camera movcment was pointed out by Annette Michclson. Look for
ir; ir h.tppcns rwice.
This is Annerre Michelson's rcrm.
Bcnjamin, 1/lttminntions, 2~0.
Eiscnstein, Film Fonn, 1 31.
Ehcnstein,Nolli11different Nntme, 53.
173
174
15 for a historical account of this appeal, see Antonia Lant, "The Curse of the
Pharoah, or How Cinema Contracted Egyptomania," October 59 (winter 1992):
86-112.
16 Lindsay, Tbe Art, 236.
1 Bla Bal:V-s, J1Jeoryofthe Film, trans. Edith Bone (:-Je\\ York: Arno Press and ~ew
York Times, 1972), 4-1.
2 Gerrrud Koch, "The Physiognomy ofThings," Nn1 German Crttique, no. 40 ( winrer 198~): 1"'2.
3 Tom Gunning, "Cinema of Attraction: Early film Irs Spectaror and the AvantGarde," Wtde A1gle 8, nos. 3-4 ( 1986): 66.
4 Balzs, Theory ofthe Ftlm, 24.
5 Miriam IIansen, "Benjamin, Cinema and Experience: The Blue flower in the
Land ofTechnology," NeJV Gennan Critique, no. 40 ( winter 1987): 179-224.
6 Balzs, cited in Gertrud Koch, "The Physiognomy ofThings," New Gem1a11 Crittque, no. 40 ( 1987): 173.
- Perer Slorerdijk, Critique ojCy1lical Rcaso11, trans. Michacl Eldred (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Prcss, 1987), 139.
8 Blazs, Tbeoryoftbe Film, 58.
9 Koch, "Physiognomy;' 168-69.
10 Thc late Epicurean Titus Lucretius wrote thc poem \ariously translated as On tbe
Nature ofTimgs and Tbe Nature oftbe Utmt:rse somenme berween 100 and 55 BC.
11 Balzs, Tbem-y oftbe Film, 65.
12 S1egfried Kracauer, F1-om Caligari to Httler (Princcron: Princeron U nivcrsity
Press, 1974), 128.
13 Balz.s, Tbeory oftbe Film, 6+-65. I cannor posirivcly idcntify ro which film Balzs
rcfers in this passage.
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
1~
18
19
20
175
176
23
N ao mi Schor, Readi~g in Detail: The A esthetics ofthe Feminine ( New York: Methuen, 1987), 6t.
William Pietz, "The Problem of the Fetish, r;' RES 9 (spring 1985): 14- 16.
Thomas Elsaesser, "Tales of Sound and fury: Observations on the famil y Mclodran1a;' in H ome l s Where the H eart Is, ed. Christine Gledhili (London: BFI,
1987), 43
13
14
15
16
This discussion deals with the ornament in the mass ornament, rather than the
"mass." for a discussion of the mass, sec Miriam Hansen, "America, Pars, the
Alps;' in Cinema a1zd the Ir~ vention of Modem L ije, ed. Leo Charney and Vanessa
Schwarrz ( Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), and Gertrud Koch,
Kmcauer zttr Einftihnt1g ( Hamburg: Junius, r 996 ), 39-5 2.
Kracauer, TheMass Ornament, 79.
Tom Lcvin's footno te, in ibid., 356. The "Tiller Girls" are but the most fan1ous
example of a very popular form of cntertainment. f or a detailed history of such
entertainment as well as an account of its mimicry of the Taylorist mode of production, see Gnter Bcrghaus, "GMkultur, fcminism, Americanism, and Popular
Entertainment in Weimar Germany;']ournalofDesig1l History 1, nos. 3-4 ( 1988 ):
193-219.
Quoted in Ronald H aymen, Brecht (New York: Oxford University Press, 1983 ),
1 JI-12.
177
178
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
fraught dialcctical relationship ro history. Prcfiguring Dcleuzc's discussion of Italian ncorcalism, he writes, "The contradiaion between the time-fillcd and the
timeless requircs its own understanding, in a peculiar balancing acr" ( 29).
Aristotle, Poetics, in Critica/ Theory Si~1ce Pinto, cd . Hazard Adams (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971), so.
Bazin, Wbnt Js Cinema?, 14.
Aristotle, Poetics, so.
Bazin, l.Ybnt Js Cinema?, 1 1.
Maya Dcrcn, "An Anagram of Ideas on Art, Form and Hlm:' Ftlm Cultttre 39
( winrcr 1965 ): 30.
Walrcr Benjamn, Jlluminations, trans. Harry Zohn (Ncw York: Schocken, 1969 ),
236.
}can Epsrcin, "Bonjour cinma and Other Writings," rrans. Tom Milne, Afterimnge, no. 10 ( 1981 ): 19.
Epstein, "Cin Mystique;' 192.
Epstcin, "Bonjour, " 22.
12
13
14
15
16
17
See, for example, Jonathan Crary, Techniques of the Obsewer (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 1992); Rosalind Krauss, The Opticnl U~1amscwus (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Prcss, 1993); and Martin Jay, Donmcnst E_ves ( Berkeley: Univcrsiry ofCalifornia Press, 1993).
2 David Bordwell, for example, implics that thc notion rhar "moderniry alrcrcd
human pcrceprion" is based on such scanty cvidcnce as Bcnjamin's meager cirarion of fifth-ccnrury an for this broad assumption in thc " Work o f Art" essay. See
David Bordwcll and Noel Carroll, eds., Post-71Jeory (Madison: Universit: of
Wisconsin Prcss, 1996), 21.
3 This looscncss is rcmarked u pon and critiqued by Miriam 1 Iansen in "America,
Pars, rhc Alps;' in Cinema and the Invention ofModem Lije, cd. Leo Charney and
Vancssa Schwartz (Bcrkclcy: Univcrsiry of California Prcss, 1995 ), 363-66.
4 }can Epstcin, "Cinc-Mystiquc;' trans. Sn1art Liebman, Millennium Film Joumal,
nos. 1o- 11 ( 1984): 192-93.
s Sn1art Licbman, "}can Epstein's Early Film Thcory, 1920-22" ( Ph.D. diss., Ncw
York Univcrsit:, 1980), 111.
6 Licbman's source is Jean Epstein, " Le Phnomene lirrrairc;' !/Esprit Nouveau 8
( n.d .): 86o.
~ Liebman, " Jcan Epstein's Early Film Theory:' 111.
8 Walrer Benjamn, Illuminatiom, trans. Harry Zohn ( Ncw York: Schocken, 1969),
91.
9 Sicgfricd Kracauer, "Boredom;' in 71Je Mnss On111ment, cd. and rrans. Thomas Y.
Levin (Cambridge, MA: Hanard Universit: Press, 1995 ), 3H
10 Scc Anson Rabinbach, The Human Motor: Energ_v, Fatigue nnd the Origim of
Modemit_v ( Bcrkclcy: U nivcrsiry of California Prcss, 1992). This book draws on
an immense number of marerials tl1at rangc from physiology to Flaubert.
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
2:'
28
29
Jcan Epstcin, "Magnification and Othcr Writings;' rrans. Sruarr Licbman, October
3 (spring 1977): 13.
Georg Lukcs, History and Clnss Omsciousness, rrans. Rodney Livingstone (Canlbridge, MA: MIT Press, 1971 ), 89: " In consequcncc of thc rationalisation of the
work-process the human qualities and idiosyncrasies of the worker appear incrcasingly as mere somus oferror."
Marccl Proust, &membrnnce ofThmgs Past, rrans. C. K. Scort Moncrietf (London: Charro& Windus, 1964), vol. 1, part 1, 57.
Walter Benjamn, " Prousr;' in Illummntions, trans. Harry Zohn (New York:
Schocken Books, 1969 ), 202.
Roger Shatruck, Prrmst>s Binoculnrs (New York: Vintagc, 1967), 150, calls thesc
moments Proust's " moments bienheurem:"; Samucl Bcckcrr simply refers to them
as Proust's " Fetiches."
Miriam Hanscn, "Bcnjan1in, Cinema and Expcricncc;' New Gennan Critique, no.
40 (winrcr 1987): 179-224; Krauss, The Opticnl U~1conscious; Kracauer, The Mnss
Omament, 291-306.
TTcidc Schlpmann, "Phcnomcnology of Film: On Sicgfricd Kracauer's Writings
of thc 192o's;' trans. Tom Levin, New Genan Critique, no. 40 ( wintcr 1987): 97114; S abine Hake, "Girls and Crisis: Thc Orhcr Sidc of Divcrsion;' ibid., 147-66.
Liebman, "Jean Epstein's Early Film Theory;' 66-67.
Walter Benjamn, One Way Street nnd Other Writi~gs, rrans. Edmond Jephcorr and
Kingsley Shorter ( London: New Left Books, 1979), 89-90.
Thc cryptic sense of melodrama in Bcnjamin's phrasc "pcople whom nothing
mO\es are taught to cry again" was clevcrly caprured by Thomas Elsaesscr's essay
on Douglas Sirk with me subtitle, " How to Makc Stones Weep:' See Thomas
Elsaesser, "Tales of Smmd and Fury;' in Home Is l.Yhere the Henrt Is, ed. Christine
Gledhill (London: BFI , 1987} , 43.
Benjamn, One Wa_yStreet, 90.
Kracauer, TheMnss Onmment, 378, n. 6.
Epstein, " Magnificarion;' 1o. Ankylosis is a fusion in the spinal boncs that prevents one from bending one's back.
Jcan Epstein, Le Livre d'Or du Cinema, 1947-48, trans. Robcrt Lambcrton, Anthology Film Archive Notes, unpaginatcd.
Although he is not citing this film, Ken Jacobs has made an entire film out of this
shot (m y favoritc moment in cinema so far) in onc film ofhisNervous System series
cntitlcd The Sea.
Epsrcin, "Magnification;' 11.
}can Epstcin, "Bonjour cinmn and Orhcr Writings;' trans. Tom Milne, Afterim~e,
no. 10 ( 1981 ): 36.
Eric Michacls, "A Primer of Restrktions of Picrurc:raking in Tradicional Arcas of
Aboriginal Australia;' Visual A~lthropologv 4 ( 1991): 259. The evidcnce for tls
early on, he admits, is by no means conclusi,e. 1 would vcnrure tl1at such reponed
rcactions could just as easily be a product of rhc modcrn belief in me magical
qualiry the camera projccted, by such anthropologists as Baldwin Spcnccr, who
brought the camera ro the field for the first time in 1901.
Epstein, " Magnification;' 1o.
179
180
30 Epstein, "Bonjour, " 3 This is refuted by Italian futurist experiments with music
such as that of Luigi Russolo, who recorded the noises of modern machines and
weapons and made new insmm1ents for use in technological recording; by contemporary music; and by Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun;' the likes ofwhich Orna
Panfil mobilized to outline an "auditory unconscious" in a talk of that title at
Columbia University's Anthropology department, November 1996.
S usan Sontag, "Spirintal Style in the Films of Robert Bresson;' in Against Interpretation ( New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1986), 18 3
16 S0ren Kierkegaard, Repetition, trans. Edna Hong and Howard Hong (Princeton:
15
17
18
2
3
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Ral Ruiz, Poetics of Cinema, trans. Brian Holmes (Pars: ditions Dis Voir,
1995), 78.
Steve Shaviro, The Cinematic Body (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
T993) , 246.
For a number of reasons, we can hardly think of the chosen si te for passing the
note as coincidental. Jonathan Craty writes, for example, "Both [photography
and money) are magical forms that establish a new set of abstraer rclations between individuals and things and in1pose those relations as the real." Techniques of
the Observer (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, T990), 13.
Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, trans. Samucl Moore and
Edward Aveling (New York: lnternational Publishers, 1967), 1:77.
Walter Benjamn, quotcd in Susan Buck-Morss, "Benjan1in's Passagenwerk: Redeeming Mass Culntre for tl1e Rcvolution;' NelV German Critique, no. 29 ( springswnmer, 1983): 2 T3.
Marx, Capital, T: T89.
Roland Barthes, "Brecht, Didcrot, Eisenstein;' in Jmage, Music, Text, trans. Stephen Heath (New York: Hill and Wang, 1977), 69-78.
The shaman's pinta- his painting or image- which m ay be as meandering as a
story oras brief as a metaphor, bears this quality of decoupage: set out with clearly
dcfincd cdges, set out clearly to ponder, ro laugh at, to see, but not, with its clearly
dcfined edges, to lose yourself in. See Taussig, Shamanism: Colonialism and The
WildMan (Chicago: University ofChicago Prcss, 1985 ), 328-30.
Barthes, "Brecht, Diderot, Eisenstein;' 70.
There are further ways in which Bresson's scencs follow Barthes's meaning. The
tableau of Bresson is also a fetish-object in Barthes's sense. The acting at significan! moments has thc quality of Brecht's social gcst, which Barthes includcs as a
characteristic of the tablcau by selecting out "prcgnant moments" that depict
gestures wherein a whole social sintation can be read. See ibid., 71 and 73-74.
Andr Bazin, "The Stylistics ofRobcrt Bresson;' in What Is Cinema?, trans. Hugh
Gray (Berkeley: University ofCalifornia Press, 1967), T3 T.
Robert Bresson, Notes on the Cinematographer, trans. Jonatl1an Griffin (London:
Quartet Books, 1986), 44.
Mirian1 Hansen, "Of Mice and Ducks;' South Atlantic Q;Jarterly 92, no. 1 ( winter
T993):43.
Ibid., 47.
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
181
182
35
36
37
38
39
Chapter 9 Revcrie
1 Anson Rabinbach , The HtmzanMotor: Energ_v, Fatigue and the Ongms ofModenzity
( Berkeley: Uni,crsiry of California Prcss, 1992).
Thomas Hardy, Tess ofthe D'Urben>illes (Ncw York: Harper & Brothers, 1935),
425.
3 Wolfgang Schivclbusch, Disenchanted Ntlfht, rrans. Angela Davies (Berkeley: University ofCalifornia Press, 1988), 220-21.
4 Since Gunning resrored the term and pittcd it against absorptive, narrativebOlmd forms of cinema, the cinema of attraction has been discussed in rclation ro
numerous genres, stylistics, and filmmakcrs. 1l1cy range, for examplc, from the
kind of spectatorship aimed at in the films of Alcxander Klugc by Miriam Hansen,
in " Reinvcnting thc Nickclodeon: Notes on Kluge and Early Cinema" Ocrober 46
( fall 1988): 178-98, ro thc dynamism of action films by Simon During rcmarks
upon in " Public Culture on a Global Scalc: A Challcnge for Cultural Sn1dies?"
Critica[ bzqui1y 23, no. 4 (summer 1997): 808-33. Thc additions ro Gunning's
discussion of attraction's remnants found in avam-garde cinema and thc musical
sections of thc musical, sparming ten years and severa! gcnrcs, are so ubiquitous
that thcy suggest thc conccpt itself is an attraction. He re I would obviously inscrt
the animated cartoon, and maybe even postulare something callcd pyrotechnical
cinema.
5 Tom Gunning, "Cinema of Astonishmcnt: Early film and thc (In)credulous
Spectator,''Artc-T~u 34 (spring 1989): 30-32.
6 Georgcs Bataillc, The Accursed Share, trans. Robert Hurlcy (New York: Zone
Books, 1988), r;57.
7 Sergei Eiscnstein, Eisenstein 011 Disney, ed. Na u m Kleinman, trans. AJan Upchurch
(New York: Mcthuen, 1988), ro.
8 Paul Radin, 77Je Trickster (New York: Bcll, 1956), ix- x.
9 See, for cxamplc, S usan Willis, ed., Tbe World According to Disney, SfX:Cial issuc of
South Atlmmc Quarter~y 92, no. r ( wintcr 199 ~).
10 Miriam Hanscn, "Of M ice and Ducks," SouthAtlantic Quarterly 92, no. 1 (winter
!993):42.
11 These bclong ro "the oldest cxpressions of mankind;' according to Radin: "The
Trickster myth is found among the simplest aboriginal tri be and among thc complcx. We encountcr it among the ancicnt Greeks, the Chinesc, the Japancse a.nd in
the Semitic world" (The Trickster, ix).
12 Ibid., 25-26.
183
184
31
32
1 1 3
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Miriatn Hanscn, " With Skin and Hair," Critical hzquiry 19 (spring 1995): 453.
Hollis Frampron, Circles of Confusion ( Rochcster, NY: Visual Smdies Workshop
Press, 1983 ), 103.
Benjatnin, llltmzmatzom, 257.
Anncttc M ichclson's tcrm for thc cffect in hcr foreword to Circles ofConftmon, 21.
Philippe Dubois, " Phorography Mise-m-Film," trans. Lynnc J(jrby, in Fugitive
Jmages, ed. Patricc Pctro ( Bloomington: Indiana Univcrsity Prcss, 1995 ), 169.
Gasron Bachclard, The Psychoanalysis of Fire, trans. Alan C. M. Ross ( Boston:
Beacon Press, 1964), 7.
Gary Smith, ed., Bmjamin (Chicago: Univcrsiry of Chicago Press, 1989), +9
Fratnpton, Circles, 98.
Julia Kristeva, Black Stm : Depression tmd Melancholia, trans. Lcon S. Roudiez
( Ncw York: Columbia U niversit:y Press, 1989), 33
Brucc Jenkins and Susan Craine, Hollis Frampton: Recollection mzd Rccreations
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Prcss, 1984), 68.
Quoted in Schli.ipmann, " Kracaucr's Phcnomenology;' 103.
Quoted in ibid., 105.
frampton, quorcd in Jcnkins and Cranc, Recollections, 68.
Blaisc Pascal, Pmses, trans. H. F. Stewart (London: Routledgc Kcgan Paul,
1950), 1!6.
Blaisc Pascal, The Grcat Shorter Works of Pascal, trans. Emeile Caillict and John C.
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
185
186
1843
48 According to Allen Wciss, thc story gocs that when reading those word~, Snow
rurned to Frampron and askcd, "Why, then, don't you?" To which Frampton
replicd, "I wish I could."
49 Benjamin, "'N,"' 1 1.
so Ibid., 7.
51 Frampton, Circles, 96 -9~.
52 Bcnjamin, "'N;" 22.
Concl usion
E lazar Barkan and Ronald Bush, cds., Prclnstories ofthe Futttre: The Primiti1>ist Project
a11d the Culture ofModen11sm (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1995), 19.
2 Dolf Stcrnberger, Panorama oder ArJSichten vom /9. Jahrlnmdert (Hamburg, 1938),
34-35, written somctime bcrwccn 1938 and 1940, citcd in Walter Benjamin, '"N'
[Thcorctics of Knowledge, Theory of Progrcss] ; The Pbiwsophical Fomm 15, nos.
1-2 (fall- winter 1982- 84): 27.
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