Impure Cinema: Political Pedagogies in Film and Theory

dc.contributor.advisor

Gaines, Jane

dc.contributor.advisor

Jameson, Fredric R

dc.contributor.author

Baumbach, Nicholas

dc.date.accessioned

2009-12-18T16:25:42Z

dc.date.available

2011-12-31T05:30:07Z

dc.date.issued

2009

dc.department

Literature

dc.description.abstract

Impure Cinema: Political Pedagogies in Film and Theory asks what are the ways that the politics of film theory have been conceptualized since the era now known as "70s film theory." In particular, it analyzes the writings on cinema, politics and art by contemporary French philosophers Alain Badiou and Jacques Rancière in relation to the influential approaches of Louis Althusser and Gilles Deleuze and to theories of documentary cinema. I argue that unlike the political modernism of 70s film theory and the post-theory turn of 90s film studies, Badiou and Rancière offer an approach to film theory that neither assumes that all films are political, nor that politics underdetermine theory, but rather suggests that we analyze both theories and films in terms of how they construct connections between cinema and politics. Following Deleuze, I call these connections "pedagogical" not because they transmit knowledge but because they always involve a new kind of connection or relation that seeks to transform habitual ways of seeing, saying or doing. For Badiou and Rancière this is based on a conception of cinema as "impure." Cinema, they argue, is never free of elements from other arts or daily life, but it is this impurity that is the grounds for linking its artistic and political possibilities. I look at various film forms that highlight cinema's impurity, in particular the "actuality" and how it has been reappropriated in various forms of documentary and essayistic practices as a way of giving cinematic form to questions of political equality.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/1621

dc.language.iso

en_US

dc.subject

Cinema

dc.subject

Aesthetics

dc.subject

Philosophy

dc.subject

Badiou

dc.subject

Alain

dc.subject

Deleuze

dc.subject

Gilles

dc.subject

Documentary

dc.subject

Film Theory

dc.subject

Political Theory

dc.subject

Ranciere

dc.subject

Jacques

dc.title

Impure Cinema: Political Pedagogies in Film and Theory

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

24

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
D_Baumbach_Nicholas_a_200912.pdf
Size:
1.47 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections