An Exchange: Richard Crew and Arkady Plotnitsky

Arkady Plotnitsky  Literature Program Duke University aplotnit@acpub.duke.edu   and Richard Crew Department of Mathematics University of Florida crew@math.ufl.edu   The following exchange between Richard Crew and Arkady Plotnitsky is in response to Plotnitsky’s essay, “‘But It Is Above All Not True’: Derrida, Relativity and the ‘Science Wars,’” which appeared in PMC (7.2) in January, 1997. […]

Peripheral Visions

E. Ann Kaplan, Looking for the Other: Feminism, Film, and the Imperial Gaze.New York: Routledge, 1996.            Looking for the Other responds to the charge that white feminist film theories, especially psychoanalytic ones, neglect issues of race. In this ambitious project, E. Ann Kaplan defends a psychoanalytic approach to the racialized subject […]

Looking Forward to Godard

Hassan Melehy Department of Romance Languages University of Vermont hmelehy@zoo.uvm.edu   Wheeler Winston Dixon, The Films of Jean-Luc Godard. Albany: SUNY Press, 1997.   At a time when Hollywood is as formulaic as ever, when the representatives of French cinema we receive in the U.S. seem to be attacking critical thought (Luc Besson’s The Fifth […]

(Global) Sense and (Local) Sensibility: Poetics/Politics of Reading Film as (Auto)Ethnography

Benzi Zhang The Chinese University of Hong Kong bzhang@cuhk.edu.hk   Rey Chow, Primitive Passions: Visuality, Sexuality, Ethnography, and Contemporary Chinese Cinema. New York: Columbia UP, 1995.   It eludes no scholar’s observation that in recent years the interest in Chinese cinema has increased dramatically. Among recent attempts to offer a theoretical approach to contemporary Chinese […]

The Grim Fascination of an Uncomfortable Legacy

Mark Welch Department of Nursing and Health Studies University of Western Sydney ma.welch@nepean.uws.edu.au   Eric Rentschler, The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi Cinema and its Afterlife. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1996.   The subtitle of Eric Rentschler’s latest book, The Ministry of Illusion (1996), gives a strong clue to its real purpose. He speaks of the Nazi […]

The Art and Artifice of Peter Greenaway

Anthony Enns Department of English University of Iowa anthony-enns@uiowa.edu   Woods, Alan. Being Naked Playing Dead: The Art of Peter Greenaway.Manchester: Manchester UP, 1996.   It is significant that the subtitle of Alan Woods’ new book, Being Naked Playing Dead, is not “The Films of…” or “The Cinema of…” but rather “The Art of Peter […]

Looking for Richard in Looking for Richard: Al Pacino Appropriates the Bard and Flogs Him Back to the Brits

  Kim Fedderson and J.M. Richardson Department of English Lakehead University Kim.Fedderson@Lakeheadu.ca Mike.Richardson@Lakeheadu.ca   Looking for Richard. Dir. Al Pacino. Twentieth Century Fox, 1997.   Al Pacino’s Looking for Richard opens with the words “King Richard” appearing first on the screen with the other syllables necessary for completing the title being added gradually. This device […]

Ersatz Truths: Variations on the Faux Documentary

Edward Brunner Department of English Southern Illinois University ebrunner@siu.edu   Prelinger, Rick. Ephemeral Films 1931-1960: To New Horizons and You Can’t Get there from Here. CD-ROM. New York: Voyager, 1994.   Prelinger, Rick. Our Secret Century: Archival Films from the Dark Side of the American Dream: Volume 1: The Rainbow is Yours with Volume 2: […]

Digital Archives and Sibylline Fragments: The Tempest and the End of Books

Peter Donaldson Department of Literature Massachusetts Institute of Technology psdlit@mit.edu Introduction   In these pages I trace how Peter Greenaway’s film Prospero’s Books reads The Tempest anachronistically, as a play about the end of books and the advent of electronic forms. Greenaway finds The Tempest relevant to this shift because, as he puts it, we […]

Singin’ in the Rain: A Hypertextual Reading

Adrian Miles Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology amiles@rmit.edu.au   This work presents a hypertextual reading of a key sequence, the song-and-dance number “You Were Meant for Me,” from Kelly and Donen’s 1956 musical Singin’ in the Rain. The sequence is read as characteristic of the film’s general semiotic principles, which combine several levels of seduction […]

The Madness of Images and Thinking Cinema

William D. Routt La Trobe University w.routt@latrobe.edu.au   Abstract: This article attempts a preliminary understanding of the experience–or sensation–of place evoked in the cinema, based on some of the earliest films and their spectators. It exposits certain ideas contained in Vachel Lindsay’s The Art of the Moving Picture and finds a delirious resemblance between these […]

Casablanca’s Régime: The Shifting Aesthetics of Political Technologies (1907-1943)

Jorge Otero-Pailos School of Architecture Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico jotero@mit.mit.edu   …the concept of reality is always the first victim of war.   –Paul Virilio, paraphrasing Kipling (War and Cinema 33)   Vacillating Realities   At the corner of the bar a man in a white suit, probably an American business traveler, asks for […]

Presenting the Cyborg’s Futurist Past: An Analysis of Dziga Vertov’s Kino-Eye

Joseph Christopher Schaub Department of Comparative Literature University of Maryland Joseph_C_SCHAUB@umail.umd.edu Introduction   Contemporary discussions about gender in cyberspace often rely on assumptions about the immanently liberatory potential of technology.   Animated image constructed by author using Man With a Movie Camera production stills.   Undoubtedly much of this enthusiasm for technology has been generated […]

Simultaneity and Overlap in Stanley Kubrick’s The Killing

Stephen Mamber Department of Film/TV University of California at Los Angeles smamber@ucla.edu   …the cinematographic image is in the present only in bad films.   –Deleuze   Stanley Kubrick’s racetrack robbery caper film The Killing (1956) is a conceptual exercise in time travel.[1] Using a narrator reminiscent of Dragnet, or the impersonal narrators of Kubrick’s […]

Transnational Cinema, Hybrid Identities and the Films of Evans Chan

Gina Marchetti University of Maryland and Nanyang Technological University tgmarchetti@ntu.edu.sg     Figures 1 and 2: Posters for To Liv(e) and Crossings.   Introduction   This article looks at the changing shapes of global Chinese cinema through the works of Hong Kong/New York filmmaker Evans Chan. As Chinese films cross beyond traditional borders, they move […]

Editor’s Introduction

Robert Kolker University of Maryland rk27@umail.umd.edu   This issue of Postmodern Culture grew from a conviction that the critical and scholarly study of film could make more use of computer-based image technologies. In our discipline (as in any other humanities undertaking) quotation and illustration constitute proof and demonstration. In the past, we have been restricted […]

Notices

    Every issue of Postmodern Culture carries notices of events, calls for papers, and other announcements, free of charge. Advertisements will also be published on an exchange basis. If you respond to one of the ads or announcements below, please mention that you saw the notice in PMC. Publication Announcements Year Zero One Forum, […]

The Cosmic Internet

Arkady Plotnitsky Literature Program Duke University aplotnit@acpub.duke.edu   Lee Smolin, The Life of the Cosmos.New York: Oxford UP, 1997.   Lee Smolin’s The Life of the Cosmos (hereafter LC) offers its readers ideas, scientific and philosophical, and a vision (based on these ideas) of a possible future physics. These ideas and this vision stem from […]

Hybrid Bound

Scott Michaelsen Department of English Michigan State University smichael@pilot.msu.edu   José David Saldívar, Border Matters: Remapping American Cultural Studies.Berkeley: U of California P, 1997.   It was not colorless, nor was it of any one uniform color–presenting to the eye, as it flowed, every possible shade of purple, like the hues of a changeable silk… […]

Culture on Vacation

Mark Goble Department of English Stanford University m.goble@leland.stanford.edu   James Clifford’s Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1997.   Why is it not surprising that the Oxford English Dictionary locates the word “vacationer” as a term used chiefly in the United States? Across the whole complicated spectrum of U.S. […]

Too Far In to Be “Out”

Thomas Lavazzi Department of Humanities/English Savannah State University lavazzit@tigerpaw.ssc.peachnet.edu   Mark Russell, ed. Out of Character: Rants, Raves, and Monologues from Today’s Top Performance Artists.New York: Bantam, 1997.   Out of Character anthologizes the work of thirty-one contemporary performance artists in ten times as many pages, from high poptech artists like Laurie Anderson and big-ticket […]

Eve, Not Edie: The Queering of Andy Warhol

  Christopher Sieving Department of Communication Arts University of Wisconsin at Madison csieving@students.wisc.edu   Jennifer Doyle, Jonathan Flatley, and José Esteban Muñoz, eds., Pop Out: Queer Warhol. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1996.   In a year that marks the eleventh anniversary of his death, Andy Warhol–artist, filmmaker, icon–continues as a cultural force to be reckoned […]

“Note on My Writing”: Poetics as Exegesis

Nicky Marsh Department of English University of Southampton, UK ebpd0@central.susx.ac.uk   Susan Howe, Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974-1979. New York: New Directions, 1996. and Leslie Scalapino, Green and Black: Selected Writings.Jersey City: Talisman, 1996.   Frame Structures and Green and Black are single-author collections written by two poets associated with the Language movement in American […]

Postmodern Spacings

  Mark Nunes et al. Department of English DeKalb College mnunes@dekalb.dc.peachnet.edu   In February of 1997, a dozen individuals began working on a collaborative on-line project entitled “Postmodern Spacings.” We came from various academic and professional fields in North America, Europe, and Australia. Our only initial “guiding principle” was that we were to discuss a […]

Welcome to Basementwood: Computer Generated Special Effects and Wired Magazine

Michele Pierson Department of English and Cultural Studies University of Melbourne m.pierson@pgrad.unimelb.edu.au   The November 1997 issue of Wired magazine featured a special report on the future of Hollywood filmmaking (“Hollywood 2.0 Special Report: The People Who Are Reinventing Entertainment”). In the Hollywood of the future there will be no film. Theatres will not be […]

Ekphrasis, Escape, and Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49

Stefan Mattessich Literature Board University of California, Santa Cruz hamglik@sirius.com     Remedios Varo, “Bordando el Manto Terrestre,” 1961. Reprinted by permission.1   Always follow the rhizome by rupture; lengthen, prolong, and relay the line of flight; make it vary, until you have produced the most abstract and tortuous of lines…. –Deleuze and Guattari, A […]

Sylvia Plath, Emmanuel Levinas, and the Aesthetics of Pathos

Scott DeShong Department of English Quinebaug Valley Community-Technical College spdes@conncoll.edu   In the following essay, I will read certain poems by Sylvia Plath to demonstrate a way of reading that derives from the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas. According to Levinas, ethics requires one to face others in such a way that the incommensurable weight of […]

On the Uses and Abuses of Literature for Life: Gilles Deleuze and the Literary Clinic

Gregg Lambert Department of English and Textual Studies Syracuse University glambert@syr.edu   One day, perhaps, there will no longer be any such thing as Art, only Medicine.   –Le Clézio   Introduction to the Literary Clinic   The title of this essay recalls an earlier question from Nietszche’s famous “On the Uses and Abuses of […]

Ordering the New World: Violence and its Re/Presentation in the Gulf War and Beyond

Simon Chesterman Magdalen College–Oxford University simon.chesterman@magdalen.oxford.ac.uk   Overture: The Gulf War Did Not Take Place Since this war was won in advance, we will never know what it would have been like had it existed. We will never know what an Iraqi taking part with a chance of fighting would have been like. We will […]

Selected Letters from Readers

      The following responses were submitted by PMC readers using regular e-mail or the PMC Reader’s Report form. Not all letters received are published, and published letters may have been edited.   Copyright (c) 1998 by the authors, all rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use […]

IMAGING EmerAgency: A Conversation with Gregory Ulmer

Joel Weishaus Center for Southwest Research University of New Mexico reality@unm.edu   The following conversation took place over email. Along with discussing aspects of our respective biographies, we focus in on “Imaging Florida,” a project that Gregory Ulmer is working on with colleagues in the Florida Research Ensemble at the University of Florida. Imaging Florida […]

Ride the Classics ‘Coast to ‘Coast

  Department of English University of Virginia kmc2f@server2.mail.Virginia.EDU  

The Therapeutic Stage/Page: Facts and Fictions about the Dead to Stir the Living

Theresa Smalec Department of Performance Studies New York University tks201@is9.nyu.edu   Peggy Phelan, Mourning Sex: Performing Public Memories. London and New York: Routledge, 1997.   In Mourning Sex: Performing Public Memories, Peggy Phelan takes performance and performative writing as bases from which to probe the relationship between private and public grief, and particularly the question […]

The Dyer Straits of Whiteness

Todd M. Kuchta Department of English Indiana University tkuchta@indiana.edu   Richard Dyer, White. London and New York: Routledge, 1997.   “White people create the dominant images of the world and don’t quite see that they thus construct the world in their image” (9). This premise drives Richard Dyer’s White, “a study of the representation of […]

Real Virtuality: Slavoj Zizek and “Post-Ideological” Ideology

James S. Hurley Department of English University of Richmond jhurley@richmond.edu   Slavoj Zizek, The Plague of Fantasies. London: Verso, 1997.   Richard Rorty has for the last several years been advising intellectuals on the left to “start talking about greed and selfishness rather than about bourgeois ideology, about starvation wages and layoffs rather than about […]

Shaping an African American Literary Canon

Robert Elliot Fox Department of English Southern Illinois University bfox@siu.edu   The Norton Anthology of African American Literature.Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Nellie Y. McKay, general editors. New York: W. W. Norton, 1997. Includes an audio companion compact disc with 21 selections.   Call and Response: The Riverside Anthology of the African American Literary Tradition. […]

Another Country: Amnesia and Memory in Contemporary South Africa

Rita Barnard Comparative Literature and Literary Theory University of Pennsylvania rbarnard@dept.english.upenn.edu   Jeremy Cronin, Even the Dead: Poems, Parables, and a Jeremiad.Cape Town: David Philip, 1997.   Sarah Nuttall and Carli Coetzee, eds. Negotiating the Past: The Making of Memory in South Africa. Oxford UP, 1998.   In 1995, American Vogue published a fashion article […]

What We Talk About When We Talk About Poetry: A Recent View from St. Petersburg A Translation of Arkadii Dragomoshchenko’s “On the Superfluous”

Evgeny Pavlov Department of Comparative Literature Princeton University evpavlov@princeton.edu Translator’s Preface   “All this is familiar; still it needs to be repeated. In its very essence the decorative grid of the Chinese interior is inexhaustible. Repetitions do not exist as long as there is time. Thus non-coincidence, deviation, residue, all requiring a different approach” (“Syn/Opsis/Tax” […]

A.R. Ammons and “the only terrible health” of Poetics

Kevin McGuirk Department of English University of Waterloo kmcguirk@watarts.uwatxerloo.ca   I’m glad the emphasis these days is off dying beautifully and more on light-minded living with the real things–soap, spray-ons, soda, paper towels, etc. (Ammons, Sphere 55) It was when my little brother, who was two and a half years younger than I, died at […]

Poetics, Polemic, and the Question of Intelligibility

Benjamin Friedlander Department of English State University of New York at Buffalo bef@acsu.buffalo.edu   Why does a poet write a statement of poetics? What can readers learn from reading such statements? Rather than answer directly, I would like to turn my attention to “Wild Form”1 by Ron Silliman, a brief essay (1200 words) currently available […]