Noir and Blanchot
«It is tempting to respond to dark times with the light of optimism. But as William S. Allen shows in Noir and Blanchot, this is to fall into the trap of darkness. In a pathbreaking exploration of using darkness to forge a way out of darkness, Allen brings together two unlikely allies - film noir and Maurice Blanchot - to disrupt the prevailing dark times.»
Todd McGowan, Professor of English, University of Vermont, USA
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. Les mer
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.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Bloomsbury Academic USA
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 200
- ISBN
- 9781501358937
- Utgivelsesår
- 2020
Anmeldelser
«It is tempting to respond to dark times with the light of optimism. But as William S. Allen shows in Noir and Blanchot, this is to fall into the trap of darkness. In a pathbreaking exploration of using darkness to forge a way out of darkness, Allen brings together two unlikely allies - film noir and Maurice Blanchot - to disrupt the prevailing dark times.»
Todd McGowan, Professor of English, University of Vermont, USA
«Georges Bataille had compared Maurice Blanchot with the main character of Invisible Man, but nobody had dared pairing the elusive writer with film noir. Noir and Blanchot accomplishes this daring hermeneutic feat: it makes sense to read Death Sentence wedged between Double Indemnity and Vertigo. Not only are all three underpinned by Hegelian negation of negation, but also the Gothic features of Blanchot's narratives stand out. Thanks to Allen's brilliant insight, Blanchot appears less as a French Kafka than as a literary Béla Tarr.»
Jean-Michel Rabaté, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvani
«William S. Allen once again shows himself to be an expert guide through the complexities of Blanchot's thought. In limpid and elegant prose, Noir and Blanchot engages an expansive range of references whose common element is the darkness of an age - an age that is still ours - in which existence goes on in the disaster of extreme alienation. Allen's prismatic readings of Blanchot show us as never before how to enter thinking into that darkness.»
Jeff Fort, Associate Professor of French, University of California, Davis, USA, and author of The Im