Within the last two decades “intermediality” has emerged as one of the most challenging concepts in media theory with no shortage of various taxonomies and definitions. What prompted the writing of the essays gathered in this volume, however, was not a desire for more classifications applied to the world of moving pictures, but a strong urge to investigate what the “inter” implied by the idea of “intermediality” stands for, and what it actually entails in the cinema. The book offers in each of the individual chapters a cross-section view of specific instances in which cinema seems to consciously position itself “in-between” media and arts, employing techniques that tap into the multimedial complexity of cinema, and bring into play the tensions generated by media differences. The introductory theoretical writings deal with the historiography of approaching intermedial phenomena in cinema presenting at the same time some of the possible “gateways” that can open up the cinematic image towards the perceptual frames of other media and arts. The book also contains essays that examine more closely specific paradigms in the poetics of cinematic intermediality, like the allure of painting in Hitchcock’s films, the exquisite ways of framing and un-framing haptical imagery in Antonioni’s works, the narrative allegories of media differences, the word and image plays and ekphrastic techniques in Jean-Luc Godard’s “total” cinema, the flâneuristic intermedial gallery of moving images created by José Luis Guerín, or the types of intermedial metalepses in Agnès Varda’s “cinécriture.” From a theoretical vantage point these essays break with the tradition of thinking of intermediality in analogy with intertextuality and attempt a phenomenological (re)definition of intermedial relations. Moreover, some of the analyses target films that expose the coexistence of the hypermediated experience of intermediality and the illusion of reality, connecting the questions of intermediality both to the indexical nature of cinematic representation and to the specific ideological and cultural context of the films, thus offering insights into a few questions regarding the “politics” of intermediality as well.
Author(s): Ágnes Pethő
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Year: 2011
Language: English
Pages: 432
City: Newcastle upon Tyne
Tags: intermediality cinema
Introduction 1
Cinema and the Passion for the In-Between
Cinema In-Between Media
Chapter One 19
Intermediality in Film: A Historiography of Methodologies
Chapter Two 55
Reading the Intermedial: Abysmal Mediality and Trans-Figuration
in the Cinema
Chapter Three 95
The World as a Media Maze: Sensual and Structural Gateways
of Intermediality in the Cinematic Image
The Intermedial Demon of the Cinematic Image
Chapter Four 179
Spellbound by Images: the Allure of Painting in the Cinema of Alfred Hitchcock
Cinema as “the Currency” of the Absolute: The Godard Paradigm
Chapter Five 233
“Tensional Differences:” The Anxiety of Re-Mediation in Jean-Luc Godard’s Films
Chapter Six 267
From the “Blank Page” to the “White Beach:” Word and Image Plays
in Jean-Luc Godard’s Cinema
Chapter Seven 295
Ekphrasis and Jean-Luc Godard’s Poetics of the In-Between
Chapter Eight 319
Post-Cinema as Pre-Cinema and Media Archaeology in Jean-Luc Godard’s Histoire(s) du cinéma
Re-Mediating the Real: Paradoxes (?) of an Intermedial Cinema
of Immediacy
Chapter Nine 343
Intermediality as the Passion of the Collector (Agnès Varda:
The Gleaners and I, José Luis Guerín: In the City of Sylvia,
Some Photos in the City of Sylvia)
Chapter Ten 369
Intermediality as Metalepsis: The “Cinécriture” of Agnès Varda
Chapter Eleven 397
Message in the (Intermedial) Bottle. The Politics and Poetics
of Intermediality in Eastern Europe: The Case of Mircea Daneliuc
Bibliography 419