Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event
In dark or desperate times, the artwork is placed in a difficult position. Optimism seems naïve, while pessimism is no better. During some of the most demanding years of the 20th century two distinctive bodies of work sought to respond to this problem: the writings of Maurice Blanchot and American film noir. Both were seeking not only to respond to the times but also to critically reflect them, but both were often criticised for their own darkness. Understanding how this darkness became the means of responding to the darkness of the times is the focus of Noir and Blanchot, which examines key films from the period (including Double Indemnity and Vertigo) alongside Blanchot's writings (particularly his 1948 narrative Death Sentence).

What emerges from this investigation is the complex manner in which these works disrupt the experience of time and the event and in doing so expose an entirely different mode of material expression.

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Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event
In dark or desperate times, the artwork is placed in a difficult position. Optimism seems naïve, while pessimism is no better. During some of the most demanding years of the 20th century two distinctive bodies of work sought to respond to this problem: the writings of Maurice Blanchot and American film noir. Both were seeking not only to respond to the times but also to critically reflect them, but both were often criticised for their own darkness. Understanding how this darkness became the means of responding to the darkness of the times is the focus of Noir and Blanchot, which examines key films from the period (including Double Indemnity and Vertigo) alongside Blanchot's writings (particularly his 1948 narrative Death Sentence).

What emerges from this investigation is the complex manner in which these works disrupt the experience of time and the event and in doing so expose an entirely different mode of material expression.

42.95 In Stock
Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event

Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event

by William S. Allen
Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event

Noir and Blanchot: Deteriorations of the Event

by William S. Allen

Paperback

$42.95 
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Overview

In dark or desperate times, the artwork is placed in a difficult position. Optimism seems naïve, while pessimism is no better. During some of the most demanding years of the 20th century two distinctive bodies of work sought to respond to this problem: the writings of Maurice Blanchot and American film noir. Both were seeking not only to respond to the times but also to critically reflect them, but both were often criticised for their own darkness. Understanding how this darkness became the means of responding to the darkness of the times is the focus of Noir and Blanchot, which examines key films from the period (including Double Indemnity and Vertigo) alongside Blanchot's writings (particularly his 1948 narrative Death Sentence).

What emerges from this investigation is the complex manner in which these works disrupt the experience of time and the event and in doing so expose an entirely different mode of material expression.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501384639
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 07/29/2021
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.41(d)

About the Author

William S. Allen is an independent researcher at the University of Southampton, UK. He is the author of Ellipsis: Of Poetry and the Experience of Language after Heidegger, Hölderlin, and Blanchot (2007), Aesthetics of Negativity: Blanchot, Adorno, and Autonomy (2016), Without End: Sade's Critique of Reason (Bloomsbury, 2018), and Blanchot and the Outside of Literature (Bloomsbury, 2019).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations

1. Dark Time
2. Ruptures and Deviations
3. Chiaroscuro
4. Between Deaths
5. Damnation
6. Rewriting History
Notes
Index

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