CANONICAL AND NON-CANONICAL IN LITERATURE AND CINEMA

CANONICAL AND NON-CANONICAL IN LITERATURE AND CINEMA

07/05/2023

Boyko Penchev

Does Cinema Kill off the “Eternal” Baba Nedelya?

  • ABSTRACT

    The paper examines the transformation of narrative elements in the film adaptation of the collections “Roots” and “Eternal Times”, as realized in Assen Shopov’s 1974 film “Eternal Times”. Attention is focused on the differences in the construction of the image of Baba Nedelya in the literary text and in the film. The death of grandmother Nedelya, presented in the film, is seen as part of the overall strategy of cinema of this period, which dissolves the cyclical ‘eternity’ constructed by the literary text, locating it along the axis of socio-historical time.


07/05/2023

Cleo Protokhristova

The Literary Canon in Woody Allen’s Workshop


07/05/2023

Plamen Antov

Technique and Mysteriousness: Cinema and Haiku. The Turn. Or What Japanese Cinema Would Look Like in Japanese

  • ABSTRACT

    Starting from several Eisensteinian publications from the late 1920s, this article discusses the problem of a deep, essential closeness between the language of cinema as the perfect symbiosis of language and technology (and the film camera as the perfect machine) and different modes of Eastern/Japanese traditional culture: haiku poetry, kabuki theater, traditional ukiyo-e painting, and the nature of pictographic writing itself. This “language” plot is considered as part of the large-scale turn in Western culture/ art in the early twentieth century as a radical crisis-renewal act of overcoming one’s own “classical” tradition of relation to reality. The “second” Heidegger and particularly “A Dialogue on Language between a Japanese and an Inquirer”(1953/54) was used as a philosophical paradigm of the plot.


07/05/2023

Timothy Corrigan

The Essay Film: “On Thoughts Occasioned by…” Montaigne to Marker

  • ABSTRACT

    This paper is part of a larger study on the essay film. It aims to explore more exactly the “essayistic” in and through film, where the essayistic indicates a kind of encounter between the self and the public domain, an encounter that measures the limits and possibilities of each as a conceptual activity. Appearing within many different artistic and material forms besides the essay film, the essayistic acts out a performative presentation of self as a kind of self-negation in which narrative or experimental structures are subsumed within the process of thinking through a public experience