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More than four decades after its founding, the Journal of Modern Literature remains a leading scholarly journal in the field of modern and contemporary literature and is widely recognized as such. It emphasizes scholarly studies of literature in all languages, as well as related arts and cultural artifacts, from 1900 to the present. International in its scope, its contributors include scholars from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceana, and South America.

Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Thursday, April 4, 2024

JML 47.2 (Winter 2024), "Contemporary Works" is now LIVE!

 


Journal of Modern Literature 47.2 (Winter 2024), on the topic "Contemporary Works," is now LIVE on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/52288


Content includes:

Editorial News


Maysaa Jaber

“I am a celebrated murderess”: Female Criminality and Multiple Personalities in Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace


Klem James

Particules Flottantes: Mutable Identity and Postmodern “Schizophrenia” in the Works of Michel Houellebecq

FREE!


Rhys William Tyers

Houellebecq’s Platform: The Detective Novel and Its Infinite Boundary


Ian Almond

Armenians in Modern Turkish Literature: The Ghost Stories of Orhan Pamuk 


Jessica Morgan-Davies

Intermediality and the Politics of (Un)Making in Agnès Varda’s Visages Villages


Elin Käck 

A Spatiotemporal Collage Aesthetic: Poets and Poetry in Siri Hustvedt’s Memories of the Future


Ciara Moloney

Word and Image in Alison Bechdel’s Memoirs


Daniel Dufournaud

“Reduced to Near Nothingness”: Don DeLillo’s Ethico-Political Project in Cosmopolis


Daniel R. Adler 

Making Visible the “Mental Wreckage”: A Historical Materialist Reading of Milkman 

FREE!


Alexandra Lawrie

“The lost boys of privilege”: Triangulation and the End of History in Ben Lerner’s The Topeka School 


Geoff Hamilton

Finite Jest: Irony and Healing in There There


Reviews

Aimee Pozorski

Language, Trauma, and Medicine: A Review Essay of John Zilcosky’s The Language of Trauma and a Defense of Trauma Theory


Sol Peláez

An Intimacy of Strangers: An Aesthetic Clinic


Tuesday, February 27, 2024

BOOK NEWS: Examining representations of blackness in Black literary and filmic texts

Intersecting Aesthetics: Literary Adaptations and Cinematic Representations of Blackness

Edited by Charlene Regester, Cynthia Baron, Ellen C. Scott, Terri Simone Francis, and Robin G. Vander



U of Mississippi P, 2023

ISBN: 9781496848857

https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/I/Intersecting-Aesthetics


Intersecting Aesthetics: Literary Adaptations and Cinematic Representations of Blackness illuminates cultural and material trends that shaped Black film adaptations during the twentieth century. Contributors to this collection reveal how Black literary and filmic texts are sites of negotiation between dominant and resistant perspectives. Their work ultimately explores the effects racial perspectives have on film adaptations and how race-inflected cultural norms have influenced studio and independent film depictions. Several chapters analyze how self-censorship and industry censorship affect Black writing and the adaptations of Black stories in early to mid-twentieth-century America. Using archival material, contributors demonstrate the ways commercial obstacles have led Black writers and white-dominated studios to mask Black experiences. Other chapters document instances in which Black writers and directors navigate cultural norms and material realities to realize their visions in literary works, independent films, and studio productions. Through uncovering patterns in Black film adaptations, Intersecting Aesthetics reveals themes, aesthetic strategies, and cultural dynamics that rightfully belong to accounts of film adaptation.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

The volume considers travelogue and autobiography sources along with the fiction of Black authors H. G. de Lisser, Richard Wright, Ann Petry, Frank Yerby, and Walter Mosley. Contributors examine independent films The Love Wanga (1936) and The Devil’s Daughter (1939); Melvin Van Peebles's first feature, The Story of a Three Day Pass (1967); and the Senegalese film Karmen Geï (2001). They also explore studio-era films In This Our Life (1942), The Foxes of Harrow (1947), Lydia Bailey (1952), The Golden Hawk (1952), and The Saracen Blade (1954) and post-studio films The Learning Tree (1969), Shaft (1971), Lady Sings the Blues (1972), and Devil in a Blue Dress (1995).

"Intersecting Aesthetics is a pivotal work from leading scholars in African American film studies. The influence of this collection will reach long into the future." - Gerald R. Butters Jr., coeditor of Beyond Blaxploitation

"A riveting take on overlooked chapters in Hollywood history" - Publishers Weekly


Charlene Regester is associate professor in the Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies and affiliate faculty with the Global Cinema Minor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is author of African American Actresses: The Struggle for Visibility, 1900–1960 (2010) and coeditor with Mae Henderson of The Josephine Baker Critical Reader (2017). Her essays have appeared in In the Shadow of “The Birth of a Nation”: Racism, Reception and Resistance (2023), Resetting the Scene: Classical Hollywood Revisited (2021), and Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020).

Cynthia Baron is professor in the Department of Theatre and Film at Bowling Green State University. She is author of Modern Acting: The Lost Chapter of American Film and Theatre (2016) and Denzel Washington (2015). She is coauthor of Acting Indie: Industry, Aesthetics, and Performance (2020), Appetites and Anxieties: Food, Film, and the Politics of Representation (2014), and Reframing Screen Performance (2008). She is coeditor of More Than a Method: Trends and Traditions in Film Performance (2004), editor of the Journal of Film and Video, and BGSU Research Scholar of Excellence 2017–2020.

Ellen C. Scott is associate professor and head of the Cinema and Media Studies Program in the School of Theater, Film, and Television at the University of California, Los Angeles. In 2016, she was awarded the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Film Scholars Grant for her project “Cinema’s Peculiar Institution,” which investigated the representation of slavery on screen. She is author of Cinema Civil Rights: Race, Repression, and Regulation in Classical Hollywood Cinema (2015). Her publications appear in Film History, African American Review, American History, Black Camera, and other journals.

Terri Simone Francis is associate professor of cinematic arts at the University of Miami. She is author of Josephine Baker’s Cinematic Prism (2021), which illustrates Baker’s conscious shaping of her celebrity and African Americans’ interest in cinema and efforts to gain equality. Her research appears in Feminist Media Histories, Film History, Film Quarterly, Black Camera, and other journals. In her former role as director of the Black Film Center/Archive at Indiana University, she curated series on Classic Black Films of the 1970s, Black Cinematic Imaginations of Outer Space, and other topics.

Robin G. Vander is associate professor in the Department of English at Xavier University of Louisiana. She is coeditor of Percival Everett: Writing Other/Wise (2014) and Perspectives on Percival Everett (2013). She is coeditor of two issues of the Xavier Review: “Celebrating Jesmyn Ward: Critical Readings and Scholarly Responses” (2018) and “Reading the Intersections of Sex and Spirit in the Creative Arts” (2007). Her article “The African American Population in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina” appears in The Review of Black Political Economy (2011).

Monday, October 9, 2023

BOOK NEWS: New insights into Fitzgerald's relation to silent film

F. Scott Fitzgerald on Silent Film

BY MARTINA MASTRANDREA



Brill, 2022

ISBN: 978-90-04-51037-1 

https://brill.com/display/title/58680


F. Scott Fitzgerald on Silent Film recalibrates the celebrated author’s early career and brings fresh understanding to the life of one of America’s truly great literary figures. Scholars have previously focused on Fitzgerald’s connection with Hollywood when he worked in Tinseltown as a screenwriter in the 1930s. However, this ground-breaking research reveals the key role that Silent Hollywood played in establishing Fitzgerald’s burgeoning reputation in the early to mid-1920s. Vividly written and drawing on a wealth of new sources, this book documents Martina Mastandrea’s exciting discovery of the first film ever adapted from a work by Fitzgerald.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

"Mastandrea’s methodology aligns with current scholarship, which looks at Fitzgerald’s work through interdisciplinary perspectives. She ambitiously and ably interweaves textual, visual, multimodal, and multilingual materials, many of which have been previously overlooked [...]. In her investigation, Mastandrea conveys the excitement that can accompany the detective work in the researcher’s process [...]. Gender roles and how the adaptations adjusted them due to conventions, censorship, and intended audiences are recurring subjects in Mastandrea’s study [...]. Her interpretations of the sheer number and variety of sources explored are convincing and, more importantly, create a more nuanced picture of Fitzgerald’s relationship to film and of the way his stories and characters took shape in this medium. Mastandrea’s restoration of the silent cinema adaptations provides scholars with new material to explore her discussion of their impact on the presentation and reception of a newly established author should encourage a reevaluation of these films and of this early period in Fitzgerald’s life and work." – Lara Rodríguez Sieweke, Umeå University

Martina Mastandrea, PhD, SAS, University of London, is an independent scholar and English teacher in Venice, Italy. She has published articles and reviews on F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Louisa May Alcott. She is the winner of the 2020 Blake Emerging Scholar Award and the joint award winner of the 2021 EAAS Rob Kroes Award.

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Book News: The Nordic Avant Garde, 1925-50

A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1925-1950

Edited by Benedikt Hjartarson, Andrea Kollnitz, Per Stounbjerg, and Tania Ørum


Brill, 2022

ISBN: 978-90-04-52011-0

https://brill.com/display/title/38041?language=en


A Cultural History of the Avant-Garde in the Nordic Countries 1925-1950 is the first publication to deal with the avant-garde in the Nordic countries in this period. The essays cover a wide range of avant-garde manifestations: literature, visual arts, theatre, architecture and design, film, radio, body culture and magazines. It includes 138 color illustrations.

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

It is the first major historical work to consider the Nordic avant-garde in a transnational perspective that includes all the arts and to discuss the role of the avant-garde not only within the aesthetic field but in a broader cultural and political context: the pre-war and wartime responses to international developments, the new cultural institutions, sexual politics, the impact of refugees and the new start after the war.

Of interest to teachers and students of modernism and the avant-garde, cultural studies, Scandinavian studies, art history, literature, cultural history, discourse and ideology of the interwar period.


Benedikt Hjartarson is professor of comparative literature and cultural studies at the University of Iceland. He has written and edited a number of books and articles on the European avant-garde, published in Icelandic, German, Danish, English and Swedish.

Andrea Kollnitz is associate professor of art history at Stockholm University. She has published a monograph on nationalist agendas in Swedish art criticism 1908-34 and edited a collection on Fashion and Modernism as well as published research on fashion caricatures, nationalist fashion and art discourses, the avant-garde artist’s role and artistic self-fashioning.

Per Stounbjerg is DPhil in Scandinavian literature and head of the School of Communication and Culture at Aarhus University. He has published on August Strindberg, genre studies, avant-garde, modernism and the aesthetics of the ugly.

Tania Ørum is professor emerita at the University of Copenhagen. She has published monographs and articles on modernism and avant-garde and is general editor of the volumes of A Cultural History of the Avant Garde in the Nordic Countries, a subseries of Avant-Garde Critical Studies (Brill | Rodopi)

Friday, September 2, 2022

Book News: Misdirection in Noir film and fiction

Noir Fiction and Film: Diversions and Misdirections

BY LEE CLARK MITCHELL




Oxford UP, 2022

ISBN: 9780192844767

https://global.oup.com/academic/product/noir-fiction-and-film-9780192844767?cc=us&lang=en&#


The argument of Noir Fiction and Film is curiously counterintuitive: that in a century of hard-boiled fiction and detective films, characteristics that at first seemed trivial swelled in importance, flourishing into crucial aspects of the genre. Among these are aimless descriptions of people and places irrelevant to plot, along with detectives consisting of little more than sparkling dialogue and flippant attitudes. What weaves together such features, however, seems to be a paradox: that a genre rooted in solving a mystery, structured around the gathering of clues, must do so by misdirecting our attention, even withholding information we think we need to generate the suspense we also desire. Yet successful noir stories and films enhance that suspense through passing diversions (descriptive details and eccentric perspectives) rather than depending on the center pieces of plot alone (suspected motives or incriminating traces). 

BOOK NEWS is an online-only feature announcing new publications in modernist and contemporary literary studies. These announcements do NOT constitute an endorsement by the Journal of Modern Literature.

As the greatest practitioners of the genre have realized, the "how" of detective fiction (its stylistic detours) draws us in more insistently than the "what" or the "who" (its linear advance). And the achievement of recent film noir is to make that "how" become the tantalizing object of our entire attention, shorn of any pretense of reading for the plot, immersing us in the diversionary delight that has animated the genre from the beginning.


Lee Clark Mitchell is Holmes Professor of Belles-Lettres at Princeton University, where he has served as Chair of the English Department and Director of the Program in American Studies. He teaches courses in American literature and film, with recent essays focusing on Cormac McCarthy, John Williams, the Coen brothers, and Edith Wharton. His recent books include Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels (Bloomsbury, 2017), Late Westerns: The Persistence of a Genre (Nebraska, 2018), and More Time: Contemporary Short Stories and Late Styles (Oxford, 2018).

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

“Ineluctable visuality”: Philip Sicker’s Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture

Review by
Katharina Rajabi
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU Munich)


Philip Sicker. Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture. Cambridge UP, 2018. x, 276 pp. $105 hardback. $84 ebook.

Joyce’s weak eyesight and lifelong eye troubles are well known and consistently invoked to constitute the analytical framing in scholarly works on visuality in his texts (and this review is no exemption). This research into visual perception and media, steadily increasing since the “visual turn,” has repeatedly interpreted the previous relative lack thereof in the vast field of Joyce studies in the light of a possible misconception that Joyce’s poor sight resulted in the privileging of the acoustic over the visual in his writing. In contrast, scholars underlining the importance of the visual invert this conclusion, suggesting instead that Joyce’s ocular ailments indeed caused a preoccupation with perception and visuality that is undeniably present in his works.

Philip Sicker, too, begins his study by drawing on this correlation, arguing that “Ulysses, composed as Joyce’s vision deteriorated […], is his ultimate act of capturing and preserving the eye’s encounter with reality, a transaction conducted via the gazes of Stephen and Bloom and through a multitude of refractory narrative lenses” (2). His aim, then, is to illustrate the significance of visual perception, recognized as being markedly embodied and mediated, as well as of those visual media themselves and their structures and regimes, showing in detail how Ulysses is informed by optical media techniques and practices. In Joyce’s text, Sicker argues, perception and “technologies of sight” (10) constitute an epistemological mode, a specific way of accessing reality: “Far from alienating subjects from the object world and one another, the perceptual habits shaped by visual technology sometimes enable Bloom and Stephen to organize and penetrate reality more deeply” (19). His analysis of visuality in Ulysses thus focuses on its epistemological, rather than its “socioeconomic” (9) implications – in contrast to preceding studies that considered visual phenomena in context with their examinations of commodity culture in Joyce. 

Each chapter of Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture centers on a different figuration of the visual. Although the title suggests a study primarily on Ulysses and film, Sicker’s monograph provides a much more far-ranging exploration. While film is certainly central to the author’s argument, the two chapters dedicated to film (chapters five and six), based on previous articles, are supplemented and framed with – in effect even more inspiring – in-depth analyses of visual media from the diorama to the stereoscope, of the text’s philosophical reflections on the conditions of vision, and of perceptual figures and constellations from the flaneur to the act of seeing as an intersubjective experience. Building on existing scholarship and incorporating relevant theoretical positions, Sicker thus delivers, for the first time, a comprehensive account of visuality in Ulysses

The opening chapter, “Ineluctable Visuality: Stephen’s Ways of Seeing,” analyzes the way visual perception is conceptualized and reflected on in the first three episodes of Ulysses, with reference to optical media including the diorama and the panorama. Focusing, in particular, on “Proteus,” Sicker delineates how the discourse on perception, manifested in optical experiments and meditations on philosophical theories of vision, centering on the subject of vision and the ontological status of the perceived object, is negotiated between idealist and materialist notions. 

The second chapter, “Stephen in the Gaze of Others,” in turn, examines the reflexivity of sight, the “condition of being watched” (15), an experience central to modernist explorations of vision, incorporating the theories of Lacan and Sartre, and the panopticon as a medial figuration of this perceptual constellation, as well as placing this within the context of religion. While Sicker acknowledges that Bloom, too, constantly finds himself in the gaze of others, he does not pursue this aspect further, choosing instead to focus entirely on Stephen. Even if understandable with regard to the structure of his argument, this nonetheless seems like a regrettable omission, since the consideration of Bloom – himself famously ruminating on the gaze of the other and seeing “ourselves as others see us” – would not only be interesting in this context, but would actually support Sicker’s argument regarding the reflexivity of vision. The constellation Bloom – Boylan, especially at the end of “Lestrygonians,” or the perceptual structure of “Cyclops,” for example, would be worth further analysis against this backdrop. 

Chapter three, “Snapshots from the Pavement: Bloom as Modernist Flâneur,” turns to Bloom, reading him, with Benjamin, as figuration of the flaneur. Focusing on flanerie as an “observational practice” (13), Sicker traces its connection to commodity culture and equates it with a form of “photographic perception” (19). The fourth chapter reads “Wandering Rocks” against the backdrop of Futurist aesthetics, demonstrating how the text is influenced by Futurist conceptions of mechanics, simultaneity, perspective (from bird’s eye view to fragmentation and close-ups), movement (photodynamism), and the employment of visual analogies. In doing so, Sicker delivers inspiring new findings, as Ulysses’ connection to Futurism has not really been previously explored. 

Chapter five and six focus on film: While chapter five provides a reading of “Nausicaa” informed by psychoanalytic film theory (Mulvey, Metz) which emphasizes the constellation of gazes, their inherent power structures, and the connection of sight and pleasure with regard to the mutoscope, chapter six traces the influence of George Méliès’s trick cinema with its transformations, continuous references to dreams and its spectacle-like quality on “Circe.” Although this connection has been examined by Joycean scholarship before, Sicker, very interestingly, adds the aspect of self-watching and visual reflexivity as a common thread. The last chapter follows this up by exploring Bloom’s and Stephen’s intersubjective perception in “Eumaeus” and “Ithaca” with reference to phenomenological approaches (Merleau-Ponty, Husserl, Lévinas), parting from their shared gaze at Molly’s photograph. Sicker also retrospectively identifies moments of parallel perception earlier in the novel, thus connecting this final chapter of his study to the first one that had focused on Stephen’s gaze and conceptualization of seeing. This clever framing indicates a new accentuation of the question of perception: Instead of thinking about visual perception solely in terms of subject and object of sight, the emphasis on visual reflexivity brings into focus the act of seeing as well as the intersubjective moment. This proves to be a very interesting and productive approach, and, supported by Sicker’s very detailed, thorough, and intent reading and analysis of the text, a major strength of his study.

Because of its admirable all-encompassing conception, however, the study in other regards sometimes tends to remain on the surface and to tie in its observations too neatly with the theory, where at times reading it against the grain would perhaps have resulted in unexpected insights. This becomes especially apparent in Sicker’s analysis of “Nausicaa” where his application of Mulvey’s and Metz’s propositions does not resolve the question of Gerty MacDowell’s agency that he himself had asserted in an earlier reading (see Sickler, “Unveiling Desire”), and instead smooths over the complexity of the optical power structures in the episode. With regard to the gendered aspects of visual media – the commodification of women through pictures and the consequences this entails for desire – following up on the political and economic implications, too, would have been interesting, even if beyond the declared scope of Sicker’s more epistemological approach to the visual. Furthermore, the problem of vagueness arising from a “metaphorical” understanding of optical media that reads them as techniques or practices at times becomes evident, especially in reference to photography. The notion of identifying Bloom with the figure of the flaneur is indeed argued very compellingly, but its subsequent equation with the photographer remains somewhat debatable given the chosen examples from the text. While the mnemonic functionalization of optical impressions and the use of close-up techniques Sicker points out in his analysis provide persuasive evidence, most often it is not clear in what sense exactly Bloom’s perceptions can be termed “pictures.” In the case of photography this is particularly perspicuous, since it does appear in the text explicitly as Sicker himself writes, and so the question arises, why the actual medium is not discussed more thoroughly in this context. Although chapter seven provides a brief analysis of Molly’s photograph, the focus lies more on the act of looking at the picture than on the implications of the medium itself. 

This, however, does not away take from the immense quality of Sicker’s study that, crucially, considers the various visual media in connection with visual perception itself, thus addressing the novel’s examinations of sight in-depth for the first time, emphasizing the “ineluctable” importance of the visual in Ulysses. Identifying the turn of the text’s perceptual discourse away from “static” configurations of the status of subject and object of vision and toward an examination of visual reflexivity and intersubjectivity, is a particularly valuable finding.

Smartly structured and engagingly written, Ulysses, Film and Visual Culture closes a gap in Joyce criticism and brings valuable contributions to modernist studies with its detailed and comprehensive approach. Bringing together and structuring existing findings under the focal point of visual perception, it delivers new insights and inspiring readings of the text and will be the basis for further research into Joyce and visuality.


Works Cited

Sicker, Philip. “Unveiling Desire: Pleasure, Power and Masquerade in Joyce’s ‘Nausicaa’ Episode.” Joyce Studies Annual, vol. 14, 2003, pp. 92-131.


Katharina Rajabi (katharina.rajabi@germanistik.uni-muenchen.de) is a PhD candidate in comparative literature and research associate at the University of Munich. Her dissertation project examines the writing of photography in literary modernism, with a special emphasis on James Joyce.