Abstract
This dissertation critically engages the meaning and scope of the category of the 'essay film';
a term that has gained increasing currency in recent decades in film studies and
contemporary art to group a diverse array of moving-image works. Departing from recent
literature on the essay film, the essay, as I argue, should be conceived less as a stable
generic category, than as a dynamic form and experimental mode of writing and
filmmaking, which employs and cuts across diverse literary, cinematic and televisual genres
and sub-genres, and which is historically subject to critical transformation as it encounters
new social, technological and cultural forms and mediums. The introduction provides a
critical survey of some of the leading proponents of the essay film, and outlines a working
definition of the essay as a literary and cinematographic form. Chapter 1 examines the
history of the essay and criticism as a literary and philosophical form, focusing on the
essayistic and critical writings of Michel de Montaigne, the early German Romantics, Walter
Benjamin, Theodor W. Adorno and Roland Barthes. Central to the critical and experimental
nature of the essay, as the chapter underlines, is the deployment of various indirect,
allegorical, and modernist rhetorical and poetic strategies and devices - such as citation,
irony, fragmentation, and parataxis - which attempt to engage the reader in the text's
reflective process through the constellation of enigmatic and disjunct moments and
perspectives. Chapter 2 explores the emergence of various essayistic forms in the Soviet
avant-garde in the 1920s, relating debates around the privileging of literary and
photographic documentary montage practices in Soviet Factography to Esfir Shub's
historical compilation films, Dziga Vertov's experimental newsreels, and Sergei Eisenstein's
project to make a plotless film-essay based on Karl Marx's Capital. Chapter 3 focuses on
Jean-Luc Godard's film and video essays - from Camera Eye (1967) to Histoire(s) du cinéma
(1988-1998) - delineating the crucial shifts in Godard's various attempts to present a critical
discourse on cinema and the media through the montage of image and sound. Chapter 4
investigates the essay films, archival video essays, and essayistic video installations of Harun
Farocki, attending to how his works endeavour to render the ciphered social life of images
and the historical transformations in technologies and techniques of seeing and imaging
available for critical interpretation. Central to my account of the essay as a literary,
cinematographic, and videographic form is the question of compilation; namely, how (from
Montaigne to Farocki) knowledge and history (whether in the form of text or image) is
archived and assembled through the juxtaposition and critical weighing of disparate
citations and images. Paramount in relation to Godard and Farocki, as I underscore, is their
respective shifts to working with video technology, which afforded both filmmakers the
capacity to more freely combine and analyze images from divergent media sources, as well
as to devise novel forms of videographic montage based on the construction of historical
correspondences between audio-visual elements. I conclude the dissertation with a
consideration of the impact of digital technology on contemporary essayistic audio-visual
practices, and how issues raised in the preceding chapters - around audio-visual criticism,
the spatialization of montage in moving-image installation work, and documentary and
archival film practices - have been affected by such technological and cultural shifts.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Qualification | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) |
| Awarding Institution |
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| Supervisors/Advisors |
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| Publication status | Accepted/In press - Sept 2018 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Note: This work was supported by the Arts and Humanities Research CouncilPhysical Location: Online and in stock at Kingston University Library
Keywords
- Communication, cultural and media studies
PhD type
- Standard route