A Self-Conscious Mise-en-scène: Experimenting with 'Disownment and Appropriation

While the historical definition of experimental films as highly personal works, marked by unconventional economic and aesthetic norms remains fundamentally unchanged, the context within which they are produced has evolved through the years. This article argues that the contemporary forms of experime...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inQuaderni d'italianistica Vol. 28; no. 1; pp. 151 - 166
Main Author Cristiano, Anthony
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Italian
Published Ottawa Iter Press 01.01.2007
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Summary:While the historical definition of experimental films as highly personal works, marked by unconventional economic and aesthetic norms remains fundamentally unchanged, the context within which they are produced has evolved through the years. This article argues that the contemporary forms of experimental filmmaking are shaped by an artist's personal fears and hopes as dictated by ideologically concomitant and traumatic events. A Self-conscious Mise-en-scène is such a work, and the subject and tools of this investigation: the making of the film amounts to a way of negotiating a communicative crisis, a study of the tendency to misrecognize the bewildering nature of pre-existing realities and disassociate oneself from them before re-inventing and appropriating their meaning and purpose.
ISSN:0226-8043
2293-7382
DOI:10.33137/q.i..v28i1.8554