Kornelia Boczkowska | Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań (original) (raw)

Papers by Kornelia Boczkowska

Research paper thumbnail of Transients punks and hobos: rethinking the history of train hopping through experimental film

Rethinking History , 2024

While in social history and mobilities research, the study of railway mobility is becoming increa... more While in social history and mobilities research, the study of railway mobility is becoming increasingly popular, offering new insights into (trans)national railway cultures, there is less interest in illicit mobility, unconventional modes of travel and non-regulated, irregular patterns of movement, such as train hopping, and the way they function in experimental film. To fill this gap, I build on the recent mobilities literature to discuss two stylistically distinct experimental films, Reading Canada Backwards (Steve Topping, 1995) and Portland (Greta Snider, 1996), which offer a social commentary on train hopping, typically associated with the history and material conditions of North American railway travels. Challenging the larger freighthopping mobilities discourse, both films confront the historical legacy of the hobo, as reimagined by occasional transients and punk drifters, as a product of capitalist enterprise, railroad transportation services and failed bourgeois masculinity. While in narrative and documentary films, hobo culture often emerges as an alternative, intrepid lifestyle and a personal philosophy based on economic or environmental concerns, Reading Canada Backwards and Portland take a more critical and ironic take on riding the rails, highlighting its casual spontaneity, playful creativity and affective potential, which questions the drifter as an active agent of marginal mobility practices.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Inside cars changing automobilities and backseat passengering in experimental film and 360 video

Mobilities, 2023

Despite the recent upsurge of interest in passengering, there are no accounts on how backseat pas... more Despite the recent upsurge of interest in passengering, there are no accounts on how backseat passengering links to experimental film and 360 video or how it responds to the broader relationship between automobilities, the organization of car travel and on-screen storytelling. To fill this gap, I follow up on the profiling of the passenger as a distinctive subject and object of infrastructures of mobility to discuss the backseat passenger’s experience, seen as both a socially engaged and embodied practice, in four stylistically distinct works, Larry Gottheim’s Harmonica, Lluis Escartín’s Mohave Cruising, Ken Jacobs’ Berkeley to San Francisco, and ASMR Driving at night: Back seat view. While Harmonica, Mohave Cruising and Berkeley to San Francisco are selective, self-aware experiments, which play out in various forms, ASMR is an authorless 360 drive video that lacks much aesthetic value and continues the long-established culture of scenic road and auto-tourism, turning on-site visitors into virtual tourists. Although each work approaches passengering visualities differently through exhibiting forward, side, parallax and 3 D views, they all articulate a multi-sensorial experience of driving and offer a relatively novel take on the practices of automobility through shifting the perspective of the driver and frontseat passenger to the backseat view.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Do gender genre and the gaze still matter Toward a feminine road movie in women s experimental film

Feminist Media Studies, 2023

Seen as historically masculine, the road movie has privileged the white heterosexual male and thu... more Seen as historically masculine, the road movie has privileged the white heterosexual male and thus perpetuated its traditional patriarchal configuration. To counteract the genre’s gendered nature, some scholars have pointed to the growing need to study women’s road movies, yet never in the context of experimental filmmaking, which was institutionalized as thoroughly masculine with women’s work dismissed as peripheral or excessively lyrical. To fill this gap, I build on feminist geography and automobilities research to discuss the “feminine” road movie aesthetics in contemporary experimental films, Sophie Calle’s No Sex Last Night (1992), Su Friedrich’s Rules of the Road (1993), Michaela Grill’s Carte Noir (2014) and Faith Arazi and Madeleine Mori’s Through a Field (2019). While Carte Noir and Through a Field construct a lone female nomadic story and Double Blind and Rules of the Road embrace the couple road movie format, all works contest the road as a masculine space and question the genderedness of mobility through a strong emphasis on the (female) self and embodied practices of driving. This signals the cinematic transformation of women from a desired object to a creative subject, consequently denying the spectator the usual pleasures associated with voyeurism, fetishism and the (patriarchal) spectacle.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The crime scene that never is, or how Echo plays with the forensic gaze

Short Film Studies, 2021

Through reconstructing the crime scene, Echo undermines the omniscient power of the forensic gaze... more Through reconstructing the crime scene, Echo undermines the omniscient power of the forensic gaze and problematizes the relationship between the image and haptic spectatorship. While eliminating the spectacle and affect, the camera intensely lingers on characters' facial image to engage viewers in the voyeurism of an absent scene of violence.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Easy Rider and Thelma & Louise revisited, or on experimental film remakes of the road movie

Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2021

Although remakes and road movies are particularly endemic to Hollywood cinema, experimental filmm... more Although remakes and road movies are particularly endemic to Hollywood cinema, experimental filmmakers have also embraced the road movie tradition and reproduced existing material for new audiences to retell, readdress and rearticulate the prior story, exploring the dialectics between repetition, differentiation and genre. Interestingly, however, while the remake, seen mostly as a genre phenomenon, has received some critical attention, remaking in the avant-garde film scene has been rarely explored by adaptation theory and practice. To somewhat fill in this gap, the article situates two recent avant-garde films, James Benning's Easy Rider (2012) and Jessica Bardsley's Goodbye Thelma (2019), within the framework of remake and adaptation studies and proposes that both works function as acknowledged and transformed remakes of the classic road movies, in which the outcome radically differs from the original story and crosses the temporal and spatial boundaries of the genre. In doing so, the projects fit in with the broader tradition of cinematic reworking and recycling as they continuously reference and exploit earlier films by creating their alternative versions as well as a strong sense of place and movement.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Slow Ecocinema, the Forest and the Eerie in Experimental Film and VR (360-degree) Nature Videos

Papers on Language and Literature , 2021

Despite the growing popularity of ecocriticism in avant-garde film studies, most publications in ... more Despite the growing popularity of ecocriticism in avant-garde film studies, most publications in the field still downplay numerous links between experimental film practice, slow ecocinema and online nature videos. This remains in a striking contrast to the increasing potential of slow eco-media to offer viewers an alternative model of how to reflect on and interact with the natural environment and environmentalism-related issues on screen. Likewise, this paper puts four stylistically distinct works, ranging from selective, self-aware 16mm and digital experiments of individual artists to environmental 360-degree videos, in the context of slow eco-cinema and discusses the ways they engage with an environmentally conscious discourse through embodying a sense of the eerie. Even though they resist adopting an activist imperative, Aspect (Richardson, 2004), Nightfall (Benning, 2012) and two VR nature films, Walking in the Woods (2016) and the 360 degree video, Relaxing Walk in the Forest (2017), evoke the eerie in their meditative rendering of the forest land- and soundscape, seen as one of the key sites of environmental humanities, and consequently fit in with the broader context of slow and ecocinema. While all works encourage the practice of perceptual retraining, Nightfall and Aspect provide a psychically charged and emotive experience of landscape and nature videos offer a more complex form of an ecologically-oriented gaze through voyerism as well as the conflict between the virtual and the real.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From car frenzy to car troubles: automobilites, highway driving and the road movie in experimental film

Mobilities, 2021

Despite the recent upsurge of interest in automobility as a vital area of research, there are no ... more Despite the recent upsurge of interest in automobility as a vital area of research, there are no accounts on how it links to the road movie and its derivatives in avant-garde and experimental filmmaking. To fill this gap, the article extends Archer's use of film and genre studies in automobilities research to discuss how Highway (Hilary Harris, 1958), Dozer (Anna Geyer, 1999) and Driving Dinosaurs (Emma Piper-Burket, 2019), which span over sixty years of experimental filmmaking, revision the road movie's automotive mobility through articulating a phenomenological and affective experience of highway driving. Echoing the new mobilities paradigm and recent phenomenological turn in film studies, the works illustrate how the cinematic representation of automobiles and the Interstate Highway System varies in tone from elegiac and celebratory to ironic and ambivalent, signaling the shift from the postwar frenzy of automobility to the modern system of mobilities after the car. While all films reproduce the ideology of American exceptionalism and reflect on the nation's mid-20th century love affair with the car, each of them offers a different take on the practices of automobility, ranging from their high-modernist moment in the 1950s to the postmodern disillusionment in the regime and impossibility of automobility.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Dwellers that do not Belong, Dwellings that no Longer Exist: Staging Hotel Interiors and (Unhomely) Domesticity in Experimental Documentary Film

Home Cultures: The Journal of Architecture, Design and Domestic Space, 2020

Commonly known as non-places or stopping places, hotels create their own sense of domesticity and... more Commonly known as non-places or stopping places, hotels create their own sense of domesticity and seclusion, simultaneously invoking an uncanny screen presence due to their non-contradictory nature. Likewise, this article builds on the theory of an architectural uncanny and weirdness to analyze how Chantal Akerman’s Hôtel Monterey and Pat O’Neill’s The Decay of Fiction delineate interior spaces to evoke an (un)homely domesticity and (un)belonging human presence. In particular, to prioritize the hotel architecture, Akerman relies on a partial and fragmentary representation of interiors, whose larger picture is always beyond spectators’ vision, and O’Neill’s creates an engrossing tension between haptic visuality and optical perception, which gives rise to the fetishism of decay. Consequently, while Hôtel Monterey’s indoor architecture presents a spectacle of largely mute, impenetrable spaces with no or little human interaction, The Decay of Fiction’s domestic spaces form a permeable layer through which shadowy figures continuously enact their fictional roles.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Windshield Tourism Goes Viral: On YouTube Scenic Drive Videos of U.S. National Parks

Screen Tourism and Affective Landscapes, 2023

Although film tourism is a well-established activity, tourism that stems from the growing interes... more Although film tourism is a well-established activity, tourism that stems from the growing interest in filming locations featuring the U.S. national parks is still a niche. This makes a striking contrast with the unprecedented role of national parks, known for their cinematic appeal on the big screen, in creating iconic backdrops for films like Star Wars (Death Valley and Redwood National Park), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (Arches National Park), The Shining (Glacier National Park) and Thelma and Louise (Canyonlands). To fill this gap, the chapter discusses how the evolution of film-induced drive tourism to virtual windshield tourism has affected tourists’ embodied experiences of affective landscapes under the post-digital conditions, as evident in the recent proliferation of YouTube scenic drive videos of U.S. national parks.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From naked bike rides to spectacles of motion: cycling and the rider-bicycle in experimental documentary film

Studies in Documentary Film, 2023

Although the relationship between cycling and cinema has recently received some attention from re... more Although the relationship between cycling and cinema has recently received some attention from researchers, there are no accounts on how it links to experimental documentary film and avant-doc storytelling. To fill this gap, I take a phenomenological stance on cycling to discuss the rider’s embodied experience of travel in a few short and stylistically distinct works, Chuck Hudina’s Bicycle (1975), Jon Behrens’ Girl and a Bicycle (1995), Vanessa Renwick’s The Yodeling Lesson (1998), Ken Paul Rosenthal’s I My Bike (2002), Tomonari Nishikawa’s Into the Mass (2007) and Tony Hill’s Bike (2013). Despite a different format and narrative focus, which questions the genderedness of cycling, explores it in a trance and dreamlike state or turns it into the sheer spectacle of motion, all films echo the recent phenomenological turn in film studies and present cycling as a multisensorial, kinesthetic practice, demonstrating how the rider-bicycle hybrid assemblage relates to both cycling mobilities and the riding environment. Compared to narrative and fiction film, experimental documentary film looks at the bicycle identity as a distinctive subject of inquiry and maps cycling not so much through its traditional connotations as through the actual lived experience, one that is not necessarily already pre-determined, mediated and ideological.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From master narratives to DIY stories: on the post-digital sublime and database documentary in two city symphony films

Studies in Documentary Film, 2021

The emergence of post-media aesthetics and hybrid media culture marked by media convergence as we... more The emergence of post-media aesthetics and hybrid media culture marked by media convergence as well as diachronic and synchronic hybridization has resulted in an ongoing re-evaluation, re-contextualization and re-mobilization of the city symphony film’s practices, which offer novel cinematic experiences by abandoning the genre’s traditional narrative trajectory or editing patterns and replacing them with new digital forms. Following this trend, I analyze the ways in which Tracing the Decay of Fiction: Encounters with a Film by Pat O’Neill and Man With A Movie Camera: The Global Remake operate within the post-digital sublime and database documentary framework, and consequently play with or critique the standard city symphony format and message centered around the concept of decay or kino-eye. Particularly, both works oppose the genre’s traditional montage and postmodern aesthetics by means of database and interactive storytelling, and instead rely on the mutability of the digital image and image-altering software, which seemingly lacks or merely imitates the sublime. To counteract this effect, the post-digital sublime takes a participatory form and is based on enquiry and discovery (Tracing) or novelty, invention and surprise (The Global Remake) rather than boredom and repetition traditionally associated with an unbounded potential of technology and the banal.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The Outlaw Machine, the Monstrous Outsider and Motorcycle Fetishists: Challenging Rebellion, Mobility and Masculinity in Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising and Steven Spielberg’s Duel

Text Matters, 2019

The paper analyzes the ways in which Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Steven Spielberg’s... more The paper analyzes the ways in which Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Steven Spielberg’s Duel (1971) draw on and challenge selected road movie conventions by adhering to the genre’s traditional reliance on cultural critique revolving around the themes of rebellion, transgression and roguery. In particular, the films seem to confront the classic road movie format through their adoption of nomadic narrative structure and engagement in a mockery of subversion where the focus on social critique is intertwined with a deep sense of alienation and existential loss “laden with psychological confusion and wayward angst” (Laderman 83). Following this trend, Spielberg’s film simultaneously depoliticizes the genre and maintains the tension between rebellion and tradition where the former shifts away from the conflict with conformist society to masculine anxiety, represented by middle class, bourgeois and capitalist values, the protagonist’s loss of innocence in the film’s finale, and t...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of “Bringing the Unseen out of the Shadows”: in Pursuit of Ciné-Trance and Film-Performance in Ben Russell’s the quarry (2002) and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS) (2010)

AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, 2018

This paper aims to present the ways in which Ben Russell’s films, the quarry and TRYPPS #7 (BADLA... more This paper aims to present the ways in which Ben Russell’s films, the quarry and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS), tend to draw on conventions traditionally associated with ciné-trance (TRYPPS #7), as developed by Jean Rouch, and film-performance (TRYPPS #7 and the quarry). While both pictures invoke the presence of the sublime, the quarry transforms the featured landscape into an image-object and hence fails to represent the lived experience and instead provides the audience with a spectacle or a sensation simultaneously engaging them in the performance on their own terms. Meanwhile, TRYPPS #7’s reliance on ciné-trance becomes more evident in its attempt to expose the hypnotic and deceptive capabilities of moving-image media, which do not only distort the spectator’s rational sense of space and perspective, but also connote the phenomenon of possession itself through featuring the protagonist’s narcotic trance. To achieve the desired effect, Russell creates an atmosphere of sublimity and trans...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Relics of the Unseen Presence? Evocations of Native American Indian Heritage and Western-Hero Road Poems in Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux and Quixote

Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, 2018

In this paper I discuss the ways in which Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux (1964) and Qu... more In this paper I discuss the ways in which Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux (1964) and Quixote (1965) evoke Native American Indian heritage and western-hero road poems by challenging the concept of the American landscape and incorporating conventions traditionally associated with cinéma pur, cinéma vérité, and the city symphony. Both pictures, seen as largely ambiguous and ironic travelogue forms, expose their audiences to “the sheer beauty of the phenomenal world” (Sitney 2002: 182) and nurture nostalgic feelings for the lost indigenous civilizations, while simultaneously reinforcing the image of an American conquistador, hence creating a strong sense of dialectical tension. Moreover, albeit differing in a specific use of imagery and editing, the films rely on dense, collage-like and often superimposed images, which clearly contribute to the complexity of mood conveyed on screen and emphasize the striking conceptual contrast between white American and Indian culture. Taking...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Avant-Doc 2 Challenges Cinema Studies to Be Useful (Again)

Papers on Language on Literature, 2021

This is a review of Scott MacDonald's The Sublimity of Document: Cinema as Diorama (Avant-Doc 2).... more This is a review of Scott MacDonald's The Sublimity of Document: Cinema as Diorama (Avant-Doc 2). Oxford UP, 2019.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Landscape, Travel, and the Gaze in Experimental Film and Video

Introduction: Landscape, Travel and the Gaze in Experimental Film and Video, 2021

This is the introduction to the special issue of Papers on Language and Literature (vol. 57, no. 1)

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Between Preservation and Disintegration in Decayed Cinema: The Uncanny and the Weird of the Sublime Archival Image in Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) and Bill Morrison’s Decasia

The Cinematic Sublime: Negative Pleasures, Structuring Absences, 2020

This paper analyzes the ways in which Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) (1971) and Bill Morrison’s De... more This paper analyzes the ways in which Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) (1971) and Bill Morrison’s Decasia (2002) rely on the uncanny and the weird in their evocation of the sublime archival image’s physical and conceptual disitegration while operating within the decayed cinema framework. Drawing on Žižek’s and Jackson’s view of the sublime as “a permanent failure of the representation to reach after the Thing” (203) or “absence (...) foregrounded [and] placed at the semantic center of the text” (159), the uncanny in the examined works embodies one’s experience of the unrepresentable and is produced as an effect of looking by the film-text, structures of looking, lighting or sound (Creed 30). Meanwhile, following H.P. Lovecraft’s theory of the weird and Freud’s concept of the uncanny, Fisher defines the former category as preoccupied with surrealism and involving an encounter with the strange based on “the conjoining of two or more things which do not belong together” and constituted by “the presence of that which does not belong”, which invokes the quality of shock, a sensation of wrongness or the Lacanian jouissance (10). Taking this line of reasoning, it seems that the analyzed films, whose precarious aesthetics resonates with a surrealist sense of “sublime decay” (Wechsler), transience and obsolescence, create both an uncanny feeling of reflective and restorative nostalgia and a weird landscape of haptic visuality in an attempt to explore the decay of the sublime archival image as the mechanism of memory and time permeated by Freudian death drive (Derrida 13) rather than to simply exemplify Cheshire’s death of cinema. To achieve the desired effect, Frampton draws on a minimalist camerawork, single static shot composition, voice-over narration or distorted sound-vision relationship and Morrison uses decomposing shots of the cellulose nitrate footage, slow motion and associative editing enhanced by Gordon’s haunting score.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Boredom Revisited, or How Andy Warhol Predated Slow Cinema

Short Film Studies, 2020

The article analyses how Andy Warhol Eating a Hamburger predates slow cinema by evoking situative... more The article analyses how Andy Warhol Eating a Hamburger predates slow cinema by evoking situative and existential boredom. Rather than simply facilitating modernist and temporal ways of seeing, Leth explores the creative potential of Warhol's post-Romantic boredom, marked by both duration and meaninglessness, to counteract the anti-immersion effect and amplify receptiveness.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The Outlaw Machine, the Monstrous Outsider and Motorcycle Fetishists: Challenging Rebellion, Mobility and Masculinity in Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising and Steven Spielberg’s Duel

Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture , 2019

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Performing CPR on Celluloid in Blow-Up

Short Film Studies, 2020

The article analyses how Blow-Up counteracts the Freudian death drive through hybridizing the mat... more The article analyses how Blow-Up counteracts the Freudian death drive through hybridizing the materialist-digital dimension of the CPR imagery and the sonic-haptic experience of breathing. Consequently, while operating within the structural film and expanded cinema framework, Fruhauf symbolically embodies the celluloid, hence 'resuscitating' both the archival and contemporary cinematic material.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Transients punks and hobos: rethinking the history of train hopping through experimental film

Rethinking History , 2024

While in social history and mobilities research, the study of railway mobility is becoming increa... more While in social history and mobilities research, the study of railway mobility is becoming increasingly popular, offering new insights into (trans)national railway cultures, there is less interest in illicit mobility, unconventional modes of travel and non-regulated, irregular patterns of movement, such as train hopping, and the way they function in experimental film. To fill this gap, I build on the recent mobilities literature to discuss two stylistically distinct experimental films, Reading Canada Backwards (Steve Topping, 1995) and Portland (Greta Snider, 1996), which offer a social commentary on train hopping, typically associated with the history and material conditions of North American railway travels. Challenging the larger freighthopping mobilities discourse, both films confront the historical legacy of the hobo, as reimagined by occasional transients and punk drifters, as a product of capitalist enterprise, railroad transportation services and failed bourgeois masculinity. While in narrative and documentary films, hobo culture often emerges as an alternative, intrepid lifestyle and a personal philosophy based on economic or environmental concerns, Reading Canada Backwards and Portland take a more critical and ironic take on riding the rails, highlighting its casual spontaneity, playful creativity and affective potential, which questions the drifter as an active agent of marginal mobility practices.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Inside cars changing automobilities and backseat passengering in experimental film and 360 video

Mobilities, 2023

Despite the recent upsurge of interest in passengering, there are no accounts on how backseat pas... more Despite the recent upsurge of interest in passengering, there are no accounts on how backseat passengering links to experimental film and 360 video or how it responds to the broader relationship between automobilities, the organization of car travel and on-screen storytelling. To fill this gap, I follow up on the profiling of the passenger as a distinctive subject and object of infrastructures of mobility to discuss the backseat passenger’s experience, seen as both a socially engaged and embodied practice, in four stylistically distinct works, Larry Gottheim’s Harmonica, Lluis Escartín’s Mohave Cruising, Ken Jacobs’ Berkeley to San Francisco, and ASMR Driving at night: Back seat view. While Harmonica, Mohave Cruising and Berkeley to San Francisco are selective, self-aware experiments, which play out in various forms, ASMR is an authorless 360 drive video that lacks much aesthetic value and continues the long-established culture of scenic road and auto-tourism, turning on-site visitors into virtual tourists. Although each work approaches passengering visualities differently through exhibiting forward, side, parallax and 3 D views, they all articulate a multi-sensorial experience of driving and offer a relatively novel take on the practices of automobility through shifting the perspective of the driver and frontseat passenger to the backseat view.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Do gender genre and the gaze still matter Toward a feminine road movie in women s experimental film

Feminist Media Studies, 2023

Seen as historically masculine, the road movie has privileged the white heterosexual male and thu... more Seen as historically masculine, the road movie has privileged the white heterosexual male and thus perpetuated its traditional patriarchal configuration. To counteract the genre’s gendered nature, some scholars have pointed to the growing need to study women’s road movies, yet never in the context of experimental filmmaking, which was institutionalized as thoroughly masculine with women’s work dismissed as peripheral or excessively lyrical. To fill this gap, I build on feminist geography and automobilities research to discuss the “feminine” road movie aesthetics in contemporary experimental films, Sophie Calle’s No Sex Last Night (1992), Su Friedrich’s Rules of the Road (1993), Michaela Grill’s Carte Noir (2014) and Faith Arazi and Madeleine Mori’s Through a Field (2019). While Carte Noir and Through a Field construct a lone female nomadic story and Double Blind and Rules of the Road embrace the couple road movie format, all works contest the road as a masculine space and question the genderedness of mobility through a strong emphasis on the (female) self and embodied practices of driving. This signals the cinematic transformation of women from a desired object to a creative subject, consequently denying the spectator the usual pleasures associated with voyeurism, fetishism and the (patriarchal) spectacle.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The crime scene that never is, or how Echo plays with the forensic gaze

Short Film Studies, 2021

Through reconstructing the crime scene, Echo undermines the omniscient power of the forensic gaze... more Through reconstructing the crime scene, Echo undermines the omniscient power of the forensic gaze and problematizes the relationship between the image and haptic spectatorship. While eliminating the spectacle and affect, the camera intensely lingers on characters' facial image to engage viewers in the voyeurism of an absent scene of violence.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Easy Rider and Thelma & Louise revisited, or on experimental film remakes of the road movie

Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2021

Although remakes and road movies are particularly endemic to Hollywood cinema, experimental filmm... more Although remakes and road movies are particularly endemic to Hollywood cinema, experimental filmmakers have also embraced the road movie tradition and reproduced existing material for new audiences to retell, readdress and rearticulate the prior story, exploring the dialectics between repetition, differentiation and genre. Interestingly, however, while the remake, seen mostly as a genre phenomenon, has received some critical attention, remaking in the avant-garde film scene has been rarely explored by adaptation theory and practice. To somewhat fill in this gap, the article situates two recent avant-garde films, James Benning's Easy Rider (2012) and Jessica Bardsley's Goodbye Thelma (2019), within the framework of remake and adaptation studies and proposes that both works function as acknowledged and transformed remakes of the classic road movies, in which the outcome radically differs from the original story and crosses the temporal and spatial boundaries of the genre. In doing so, the projects fit in with the broader tradition of cinematic reworking and recycling as they continuously reference and exploit earlier films by creating their alternative versions as well as a strong sense of place and movement.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Slow Ecocinema, the Forest and the Eerie in Experimental Film and VR (360-degree) Nature Videos

Papers on Language and Literature , 2021

Despite the growing popularity of ecocriticism in avant-garde film studies, most publications in ... more Despite the growing popularity of ecocriticism in avant-garde film studies, most publications in the field still downplay numerous links between experimental film practice, slow ecocinema and online nature videos. This remains in a striking contrast to the increasing potential of slow eco-media to offer viewers an alternative model of how to reflect on and interact with the natural environment and environmentalism-related issues on screen. Likewise, this paper puts four stylistically distinct works, ranging from selective, self-aware 16mm and digital experiments of individual artists to environmental 360-degree videos, in the context of slow eco-cinema and discusses the ways they engage with an environmentally conscious discourse through embodying a sense of the eerie. Even though they resist adopting an activist imperative, Aspect (Richardson, 2004), Nightfall (Benning, 2012) and two VR nature films, Walking in the Woods (2016) and the 360 degree video, Relaxing Walk in the Forest (2017), evoke the eerie in their meditative rendering of the forest land- and soundscape, seen as one of the key sites of environmental humanities, and consequently fit in with the broader context of slow and ecocinema. While all works encourage the practice of perceptual retraining, Nightfall and Aspect provide a psychically charged and emotive experience of landscape and nature videos offer a more complex form of an ecologically-oriented gaze through voyerism as well as the conflict between the virtual and the real.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From car frenzy to car troubles: automobilites, highway driving and the road movie in experimental film

Mobilities, 2021

Despite the recent upsurge of interest in automobility as a vital area of research, there are no ... more Despite the recent upsurge of interest in automobility as a vital area of research, there are no accounts on how it links to the road movie and its derivatives in avant-garde and experimental filmmaking. To fill this gap, the article extends Archer's use of film and genre studies in automobilities research to discuss how Highway (Hilary Harris, 1958), Dozer (Anna Geyer, 1999) and Driving Dinosaurs (Emma Piper-Burket, 2019), which span over sixty years of experimental filmmaking, revision the road movie's automotive mobility through articulating a phenomenological and affective experience of highway driving. Echoing the new mobilities paradigm and recent phenomenological turn in film studies, the works illustrate how the cinematic representation of automobiles and the Interstate Highway System varies in tone from elegiac and celebratory to ironic and ambivalent, signaling the shift from the postwar frenzy of automobility to the modern system of mobilities after the car. While all films reproduce the ideology of American exceptionalism and reflect on the nation's mid-20th century love affair with the car, each of them offers a different take on the practices of automobility, ranging from their high-modernist moment in the 1950s to the postmodern disillusionment in the regime and impossibility of automobility.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Dwellers that do not Belong, Dwellings that no Longer Exist: Staging Hotel Interiors and (Unhomely) Domesticity in Experimental Documentary Film

Home Cultures: The Journal of Architecture, Design and Domestic Space, 2020

Commonly known as non-places or stopping places, hotels create their own sense of domesticity and... more Commonly known as non-places or stopping places, hotels create their own sense of domesticity and seclusion, simultaneously invoking an uncanny screen presence due to their non-contradictory nature. Likewise, this article builds on the theory of an architectural uncanny and weirdness to analyze how Chantal Akerman’s Hôtel Monterey and Pat O’Neill’s The Decay of Fiction delineate interior spaces to evoke an (un)homely domesticity and (un)belonging human presence. In particular, to prioritize the hotel architecture, Akerman relies on a partial and fragmentary representation of interiors, whose larger picture is always beyond spectators’ vision, and O’Neill’s creates an engrossing tension between haptic visuality and optical perception, which gives rise to the fetishism of decay. Consequently, while Hôtel Monterey’s indoor architecture presents a spectacle of largely mute, impenetrable spaces with no or little human interaction, The Decay of Fiction’s domestic spaces form a permeable layer through which shadowy figures continuously enact their fictional roles.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Windshield Tourism Goes Viral: On YouTube Scenic Drive Videos of U.S. National Parks

Screen Tourism and Affective Landscapes, 2023

Although film tourism is a well-established activity, tourism that stems from the growing interes... more Although film tourism is a well-established activity, tourism that stems from the growing interest in filming locations featuring the U.S. national parks is still a niche. This makes a striking contrast with the unprecedented role of national parks, known for their cinematic appeal on the big screen, in creating iconic backdrops for films like Star Wars (Death Valley and Redwood National Park), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (Arches National Park), The Shining (Glacier National Park) and Thelma and Louise (Canyonlands). To fill this gap, the chapter discusses how the evolution of film-induced drive tourism to virtual windshield tourism has affected tourists’ embodied experiences of affective landscapes under the post-digital conditions, as evident in the recent proliferation of YouTube scenic drive videos of U.S. national parks.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From naked bike rides to spectacles of motion: cycling and the rider-bicycle in experimental documentary film

Studies in Documentary Film, 2023

Although the relationship between cycling and cinema has recently received some attention from re... more Although the relationship between cycling and cinema has recently received some attention from researchers, there are no accounts on how it links to experimental documentary film and avant-doc storytelling. To fill this gap, I take a phenomenological stance on cycling to discuss the rider’s embodied experience of travel in a few short and stylistically distinct works, Chuck Hudina’s Bicycle (1975), Jon Behrens’ Girl and a Bicycle (1995), Vanessa Renwick’s The Yodeling Lesson (1998), Ken Paul Rosenthal’s I My Bike (2002), Tomonari Nishikawa’s Into the Mass (2007) and Tony Hill’s Bike (2013). Despite a different format and narrative focus, which questions the genderedness of cycling, explores it in a trance and dreamlike state or turns it into the sheer spectacle of motion, all films echo the recent phenomenological turn in film studies and present cycling as a multisensorial, kinesthetic practice, demonstrating how the rider-bicycle hybrid assemblage relates to both cycling mobilities and the riding environment. Compared to narrative and fiction film, experimental documentary film looks at the bicycle identity as a distinctive subject of inquiry and maps cycling not so much through its traditional connotations as through the actual lived experience, one that is not necessarily already pre-determined, mediated and ideological.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of From master narratives to DIY stories: on the post-digital sublime and database documentary in two city symphony films

Studies in Documentary Film, 2021

The emergence of post-media aesthetics and hybrid media culture marked by media convergence as we... more The emergence of post-media aesthetics and hybrid media culture marked by media convergence as well as diachronic and synchronic hybridization has resulted in an ongoing re-evaluation, re-contextualization and re-mobilization of the city symphony film’s practices, which offer novel cinematic experiences by abandoning the genre’s traditional narrative trajectory or editing patterns and replacing them with new digital forms. Following this trend, I analyze the ways in which Tracing the Decay of Fiction: Encounters with a Film by Pat O’Neill and Man With A Movie Camera: The Global Remake operate within the post-digital sublime and database documentary framework, and consequently play with or critique the standard city symphony format and message centered around the concept of decay or kino-eye. Particularly, both works oppose the genre’s traditional montage and postmodern aesthetics by means of database and interactive storytelling, and instead rely on the mutability of the digital image and image-altering software, which seemingly lacks or merely imitates the sublime. To counteract this effect, the post-digital sublime takes a participatory form and is based on enquiry and discovery (Tracing) or novelty, invention and surprise (The Global Remake) rather than boredom and repetition traditionally associated with an unbounded potential of technology and the banal.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The Outlaw Machine, the Monstrous Outsider and Motorcycle Fetishists: Challenging Rebellion, Mobility and Masculinity in Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising and Steven Spielberg’s Duel

Text Matters, 2019

The paper analyzes the ways in which Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Steven Spielberg’s... more The paper analyzes the ways in which Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Steven Spielberg’s Duel (1971) draw on and challenge selected road movie conventions by adhering to the genre’s traditional reliance on cultural critique revolving around the themes of rebellion, transgression and roguery. In particular, the films seem to confront the classic road movie format through their adoption of nomadic narrative structure and engagement in a mockery of subversion where the focus on social critique is intertwined with a deep sense of alienation and existential loss “laden with psychological confusion and wayward angst” (Laderman 83). Following this trend, Spielberg’s film simultaneously depoliticizes the genre and maintains the tension between rebellion and tradition where the former shifts away from the conflict with conformist society to masculine anxiety, represented by middle class, bourgeois and capitalist values, the protagonist’s loss of innocence in the film’s finale, and t...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of “Bringing the Unseen out of the Shadows”: in Pursuit of Ciné-Trance and Film-Performance in Ben Russell’s the quarry (2002) and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS) (2010)

AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, 2018

This paper aims to present the ways in which Ben Russell’s films, the quarry and TRYPPS #7 (BADLA... more This paper aims to present the ways in which Ben Russell’s films, the quarry and TRYPPS #7 (BADLANDS), tend to draw on conventions traditionally associated with ciné-trance (TRYPPS #7), as developed by Jean Rouch, and film-performance (TRYPPS #7 and the quarry). While both pictures invoke the presence of the sublime, the quarry transforms the featured landscape into an image-object and hence fails to represent the lived experience and instead provides the audience with a spectacle or a sensation simultaneously engaging them in the performance on their own terms. Meanwhile, TRYPPS #7’s reliance on ciné-trance becomes more evident in its attempt to expose the hypnotic and deceptive capabilities of moving-image media, which do not only distort the spectator’s rational sense of space and perspective, but also connote the phenomenon of possession itself through featuring the protagonist’s narcotic trance. To achieve the desired effect, Russell creates an atmosphere of sublimity and trans...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Relics of the Unseen Presence? Evocations of Native American Indian Heritage and Western-Hero Road Poems in Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux and Quixote

Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, 2018

In this paper I discuss the ways in which Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux (1964) and Qu... more In this paper I discuss the ways in which Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux (1964) and Quixote (1965) evoke Native American Indian heritage and western-hero road poems by challenging the concept of the American landscape and incorporating conventions traditionally associated with cinéma pur, cinéma vérité, and the city symphony. Both pictures, seen as largely ambiguous and ironic travelogue forms, expose their audiences to “the sheer beauty of the phenomenal world” (Sitney 2002: 182) and nurture nostalgic feelings for the lost indigenous civilizations, while simultaneously reinforcing the image of an American conquistador, hence creating a strong sense of dialectical tension. Moreover, albeit differing in a specific use of imagery and editing, the films rely on dense, collage-like and often superimposed images, which clearly contribute to the complexity of mood conveyed on screen and emphasize the striking conceptual contrast between white American and Indian culture. Taking...

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Avant-Doc 2 Challenges Cinema Studies to Be Useful (Again)

Papers on Language on Literature, 2021

This is a review of Scott MacDonald's The Sublimity of Document: Cinema as Diorama (Avant-Doc 2).... more This is a review of Scott MacDonald's The Sublimity of Document: Cinema as Diorama (Avant-Doc 2). Oxford UP, 2019.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Landscape, Travel, and the Gaze in Experimental Film and Video

Introduction: Landscape, Travel and the Gaze in Experimental Film and Video, 2021

This is the introduction to the special issue of Papers on Language and Literature (vol. 57, no. 1)

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Between Preservation and Disintegration in Decayed Cinema: The Uncanny and the Weird of the Sublime Archival Image in Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) and Bill Morrison’s Decasia

The Cinematic Sublime: Negative Pleasures, Structuring Absences, 2020

This paper analyzes the ways in which Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) (1971) and Bill Morrison’s De... more This paper analyzes the ways in which Hollis Frampton’s (nostalgia) (1971) and Bill Morrison’s Decasia (2002) rely on the uncanny and the weird in their evocation of the sublime archival image’s physical and conceptual disitegration while operating within the decayed cinema framework. Drawing on Žižek’s and Jackson’s view of the sublime as “a permanent failure of the representation to reach after the Thing” (203) or “absence (...) foregrounded [and] placed at the semantic center of the text” (159), the uncanny in the examined works embodies one’s experience of the unrepresentable and is produced as an effect of looking by the film-text, structures of looking, lighting or sound (Creed 30). Meanwhile, following H.P. Lovecraft’s theory of the weird and Freud’s concept of the uncanny, Fisher defines the former category as preoccupied with surrealism and involving an encounter with the strange based on “the conjoining of two or more things which do not belong together” and constituted by “the presence of that which does not belong”, which invokes the quality of shock, a sensation of wrongness or the Lacanian jouissance (10). Taking this line of reasoning, it seems that the analyzed films, whose precarious aesthetics resonates with a surrealist sense of “sublime decay” (Wechsler), transience and obsolescence, create both an uncanny feeling of reflective and restorative nostalgia and a weird landscape of haptic visuality in an attempt to explore the decay of the sublime archival image as the mechanism of memory and time permeated by Freudian death drive (Derrida 13) rather than to simply exemplify Cheshire’s death of cinema. To achieve the desired effect, Frampton draws on a minimalist camerawork, single static shot composition, voice-over narration or distorted sound-vision relationship and Morrison uses decomposing shots of the cellulose nitrate footage, slow motion and associative editing enhanced by Gordon’s haunting score.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Boredom Revisited, or How Andy Warhol Predated Slow Cinema

Short Film Studies, 2020

The article analyses how Andy Warhol Eating a Hamburger predates slow cinema by evoking situative... more The article analyses how Andy Warhol Eating a Hamburger predates slow cinema by evoking situative and existential boredom. Rather than simply facilitating modernist and temporal ways of seeing, Leth explores the creative potential of Warhol's post-Romantic boredom, marked by both duration and meaninglessness, to counteract the anti-immersion effect and amplify receptiveness.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The Outlaw Machine, the Monstrous Outsider and Motorcycle Fetishists: Challenging Rebellion, Mobility and Masculinity in Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising and Steven Spielberg’s Duel

Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture , 2019

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Performing CPR on Celluloid in Blow-Up

Short Film Studies, 2020

The article analyses how Blow-Up counteracts the Freudian death drive through hybridizing the mat... more The article analyses how Blow-Up counteracts the Freudian death drive through hybridizing the materialist-digital dimension of the CPR imagery and the sonic-haptic experience of breathing. Consequently, while operating within the structural film and expanded cinema framework, Fruhauf symbolically embodies the celluloid, hence 'resuscitating' both the archival and contemporary cinematic material.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Lost Highways, Embodied Travels: The Road Movie in American Experimental Film and Video

Brill, 2023

Often identified as one of the most genuine and enduring American film genres, the road movie has... more Often identified as one of the most genuine and enduring American film genres, the road movie has never been explored in the context of experimental filmmaking. To fill this gap, Lost Highways, Embodied Travels provides the first book-length study of over eighty unique and often obscure films and videos and situates them within the corporeal turn in American avant-garde cinema, so far mostly associated with body genres and sexually explicit films. Drawing on unpublished archival materials, the book offers a fresh take on both past and current practices of the experimental film community for scholars, students, makers and film buffs.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Framing Fear, Horror and Terror through the Visible and the Invisible (co-edited with Joseph Campos II)

Inter-Disciplinary Press, 2016

This volume addresses the juxtaposition of the visible and invisible in Fear, Horror, and Terror.... more This volume addresses the juxtaposition of the visible and invisible in Fear, Horror, and Terror. When addressing the visible and invisible we must ask ourselves what is it that we are encouraged to see, what are the processes of image production, and what powers underlie the image? The production of image, both visible and invisible, is a privileged space where the state, world order, security issues, military engagements, social issues, culture, identity and ideas are managed in, and through, a specific discourse. Within this discursive space, a variety of ideas – both the action and the concept – is consistently managed. It is politicized and made instrumental even while eliding and obscuring important determining contexts. This discursive space is also an ideological space that refigures and represents specific ideas within managed conceptualization that affirm authority. Thus, this volume will examine the ways in which Fear, Horror, and Terror are intertwined in the production of power and knowledge through what is made visible and what is kept invisible.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The Impact of American and Russian Cosmism on the Representation of Space Exploration in 20th Century American and Soviet Space Art

Adam Mickiewicz University Press, 2016

The aim of this book is to explore and compare the impact of Russian and American Cosmism on the ... more The aim of this book is to explore and compare the impact of Russian and American Cosmism on the representation of space exploration in selected 20th century American and Soviet space art works in the context of both nations' culture and literature of the period. The source material are 200 works of American (100) and Soviet (100) space art (1944-1991) which become subject to visual content analysis whose purpose is to examine the relation between the chief assumptions of Russian and American Cosmism and the image of space exploration constructed by American and Soviet artists. The research results obtained from the study have suggested that while the investigated representation of space exploration in the Soviet works can reflect approximately 70% of primary assumptions of Russian Cosmism, its depiction in the U.S. images seems to conceptualize approximately 80% of American Cosmism’s chief tenets.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The American Space and the Russian Cosmos as 20th and 21st century percepts of the universe in the light of selected aspects of their national and the global culture

This work is about the American and Russian 20th- and 21st-century perception of the universe, vi... more This work is about the American and Russian 20th- and 21st-century perception of the universe, viewed as a purely mental construct. A contrastive analysis is conducted with the primary assumption that what humans sense is not necessarily real, meaning that it does not exist the way we perceive it. This assumption is in line with the theories advanced by Rudolph Rummel and Manoj Thulasidas, regarding the perception of reality and the universe viewed from the perspective of cognitive cultural studies. They imply that most spheres of the outer world, constituting the so-called internal or perceived reality, are mostly unavailable directly to human cognitive sensory apparatus.
In particular, the work investigates a set of human cultural activities performed by both countries in the course of the 20th and 21st centuries, embracing i) philosophical systems; ii) scientific thought; iii) technology, specifically space research and exploration; iv) the individual witnesses’ space impressions; v) the official space policy objectives; vi) the concepts of spacescape and space culture and the national space ethos at the beginning of the new millennium. The research, conducted qualitatively, will be pursued with the premise that certain differences in the way humans perceive the world might be rooted in disparate cultural systems of the American and Russian nations. This hypothesis is based on Richard Nisbett’s research on the relation between culture and human perception of reality that has revealed the predominant role of certain areas of culture in shaping human processes of cognition. In this respect, my cross-cultural examination of the American and Russian perception of the universe additionally attempts to demonstrate the extent to which particular aspects of culture affect it.
Chapter 1 presents the primary assumptions of the paper, having their roots in the notion of human perception of reality and the role culture plays in it as well as it introduces the main research methods of the paper.
Chapter 2 examines how perception of the universe evolved since the beginning of human civilization and discusses the meaning of cosmology in the context of culture. It also traces the cosmological thought in its philosophical and scientific dimension which serves as a theoretical introduction to the next chapter.
Chapter 3 attempts to determine the shape of the American and Russian pre-Cold War universe understood as a purely mental construct. In order to complete this task, it discusses both countries’ i) philosophical movements, particularly the Russian cosmism (both religious and scientific strand) and the Whiteheadian process cosmology; ii) scientific thought and achievements, specifically the development of observational cosmology (U.S.) and the beginnings of space research and exploration (U.S. and USSR). The chapter also seeks to answer the question whether it was cosmism and process cosmology or political tension during and after the Second World War that could have fueled the two countries’ first inquiries into space.
Chapter 4 investigates the Soviet and American perception of the cosmos during the Cold War rivalry. Here, the cosmonauts and astronauts’ reports, memoirs and interviews, containing space impressions, serve as the main basis for the analysis. The chapter introduces the concept of the “overview effect” coined by Frank White, depicting a multidimensional nature of the experience of space travel. The study deals with both short and long-duration orbital flights, including the U.S. moon missions. It argues that there is a clear distinction between the Russian Cosmos and the American Space functioning as mental constructs in the two nations’ cognitive view of the universe. Lastly, it attempts to demonstrate the extent to which particular aspects of culture affect these perceptions.
Chapter 5 discusses the post-Cold War perception of the universe existing in the cultural mentality of the Russian and American nations. In order to establish its form, it focuses on i) the internalization of cosmology; ii) new space policy objectives; iii) the globally emerging concepts of spacescape and space culture; vi) the national space ethos. The chapter argues that, despite today’s considerable resemblances in space endeavours, the nationwide perception of the universe remains, to a large extent disparate, providing the framework of what might be considered the American Space (Final Frontier) and the Russian Cosmos (High Frontier). Finally, it attempts to assess the impact of certain aspects of culture on the final shape of the two countries’ space perceptions.
The main outcome is that the American and Russian perception of the universe in the 20th and 21st century is grounded in a set of distinct features generated mainly by the philosophical and scientific heritage of the two nations rather than any other aspects of the national and global culture. It is also concluded that the universe functions, to a large extent merely as human mental construct, having to do more with both culture-specific and global worldview than reality itself.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Space exploration in 20th century American and Soviet literature and art

PhD Dissertation, 2015

The aim of this dissertation is to explore and compare the impact of Russian and American Cosmism... more The aim of this dissertation is to explore and compare the impact of Russian and American Cosmism on the representation of space exploration in selected 20th century American and Soviet space art works in the context of both nations’ culture and literature of the period. The source material are 200 works of American (100) and Soviet (100) space art (1944-1991) which become subject to visual content analysis whose purpose is to examine the relation between the chief assumptions of Russian and American Cosmism and the image of space exploration constructed by American and Soviet artists. The dissertation consists of four chapters. Chapter 1 attempts to define and present various views on Russian Cosmism, including its impact on the development of Soviet cosmonautics and space age ideology as well as selected aspects of 20th century culture related to or depicting the space programme’s ventures. Chapter 2 presents the core premises of the concept of Harrison's American Cosmism (2013), an extension of Harris's space ethos (1992), and discusses its impact on selected aspects of 20th century U.S. culture surrounding the national space efforts. Chapter 3 outlines the history and the principal generic characteristics of American and Soviet space art in the context of 20th century culture, literature as well as the major trends in space research and exploration pursued by both nations. Chapter 4 presents the primary assumptions of the research methodology utilized in the analysis and the chief research results of the study of American and Russian space art regarding the main thesis of this work.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Between the high and the final frontier: The Russian Cosmos meets the American Space in the Cold War popular culture of space travelers

42nd Annual PCA/ACA National Conference, Boston, MA, April 2012

The aim of the paper is to inquire into the Russian concept of the universe viewed as the Cold Wa... more The aim of the paper is to inquire into the Russian concept of the universe viewed as the Cold War cultural construct and contrast it with its American counterpart. My cultural studies analysis is based on the selected cosmonauts’ and astronauts’ cosmic impressions published in their space memoirs between the 1960s and the 1980s as well as the interviews with some of these space travelers conducted in the 1980s and 1990s by Frank White (1998). Interestingly, the genre of a space memoir, which might seem to serve merely as a propagandistic medium, turns out to be a valuable popular culture text representing a variety of encoded meanings. Their core lies in a psychological-cultural notion of the “overview effect” coined by Frank White (1998), depicting a multidimensional nature of the experience of space travel. Founded on such a premise, my study argues that there is a clear distinction between the Russian Cosmos (High Frontier) and the American Space (Final Frontier), functioning both as mental and cultural constructs in the two nations’ cognitive view of the universe. It also suggests that these distinct patterns might stem from an unquestionable disparateness of the American and the Russian cultures. Particularly, they may have derived from specific philosophical systems, namely the Russian cosmism and the American tradition of pragmatic and religious thought as well as the nations’ long term development of space research and exploration such as the emergence of the US observational cosmology at the turn of the 20th century.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The American pragmatism and the Russian mysticism? On popular visual representations of extraterrestrial ‘non-places’ that inspire(d) the space age

11th Conference of the European Society for the Study of English, Istanbul, 2012

The paper aims to investigate the popular culture of space travel and extraterrestrial “non-place... more The paper aims to investigate the popular culture of space travel and extraterrestrial “non-places” (Augé 1995) where I inquire into the American mindset viewed as a cultural construct and compare it with its Russian counterpart. My semiotic and cultural studies analysis is based on varied cosmic impressions contained in selected space representations published in the 20th century mass media, including space art, photography, zero-g space art, astronomical scientific illustrations or popular culture artifacts such as stamps, postcards or magazine covers. Particularly, the genre of a space art, so far hardly explored in more interdisciplinary and scholarly terms, serves as a valuable popular culture text representing an array of encoded meanings. The undertaken research of selected scientists, artists or space travelers, embracing Georgi Kurnin, Aleksei Leonov, Andrei Sokolov, Chesley Bonestell, David Hardy or William Hartman, is aimed to reveal certain cross-cultural differences between the two space age rivals, particularly those considering their cognitive view of the world. The core of my analysis lies in cultural studies, conceptual art, cognition and philosophy of culture whose mutual premise is that culture shapes one’s mindset and that the spiritual, i.e. common patterns of human thought and behaviour, is reflected in the material (see, e.g. Donald 1997). Founded on such an assumption, my study seeks to determine whether a commonly proposed distinction between the American pragmatism and the Russian mysticism exists in the realm of both nations’ popular culture of space representations, functioning here as cultural-cognitive constructs. Also, the paper attempts to establish which national heritage domains certain dissimilarities might have derived from, examining, e.g. the movement of the Russian Cosmism, the Russian Orthodox Church philosophy, the American tradition of frontier experience as well as religious and pragmatic thought, the rise of the U.S. observational cosmology or the global village phenomenon (see, e.g. Gavin-Blakeley 1976).

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of The evolution of slow experimental eco-cinema: Deconstructing forest land- and soundscape in Emily Richardson’s Aspect (2004), James Benning’s Nightfall (2012) and nature videos

9th International Small Cinemas Conference: From the Grassroots to the Global,Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, November 9-10, 2018

This paper discusses the evolution of slow experimental eco-cinema from selective, self-aware exp... more This paper discusses the evolution of slow experimental eco-cinema from selective, self-aware experiments of individual artists to environmental videos as well as analyzes how Emily Richardson’s Aspect (2004), James Benning’s Nightfall (2012) and selected online nature films rely on the Romantic sublime and the eerie in their meditative deconstruction of the featured forest land- and soundscape. Whereas Nightfall and nature videos pay homage to the Hudson River School’s tradition of sublime and luminist painting or Schrader’s transcendental style and Aspect draws on stylistic excess of non-verbal sublime cinema (Thompson, Bagatavicius), all works simultaneously embody a sense of the eerie, composed by “a failure of absence or by a failure of presence” (Fisher 60), and transcend Freud’s unheimlich through their preoccupation with questions of agency and the outside grounded in serenity and disengagement from mundane reality. Likewise, although Nightfall consists of a single 98-minute shot of the Sierra Nevada Mountains’ forest and “the real-time light changing from day to night” (Benning) and Aspect constitutes a 9-minute time-lapse footage of the Kings Wood and the shifting colour, light and shadow filmed over the period of one year, in both pictures the sublime and the eerie remain closely associated with the imagery and sound textures of the location they haunt, which entails a deeply persistent sense of suspense. Meanwhile, nature videos, which are typically digitalized, authorless, ubiquitous and situated within the visual culture of conservation movements (Lam 214), both offer an ecologically-oriented gaze and evoke the sublime and the eerie through voyerism as well as the conflict between the virtual and the real (Kamphof 261). This effect is also achieved by means of city symphony and structuralist documentary conventions, such as long, static, tripod-mounted digital camera shots, diegetic soundtrack (Nightfall, nature videos), long exposures on single film frazes or time-lapse (Aspect).

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact