This book offers a unique perspective on contemporary Polish cinema’s engagement with histories of Polish violence against their Jewish neighbours during the Holocaust. Moving beyond conventional studies of historical representation on screen, the book considers how cinema reframes the unwanted knowledge of violence in its aftermaths. The book draws on Derridean hauntology, Didi-Huberman’s confrontations with art images, Levinasian ethics and anamorphosis to examine cinematic reconfigurations of histories and memories that are vulnerable to evasion and formlessness. Innovative analyses of Birthplace (Łoziński, 1992), It Looks Pretty From a Distance (Sasnal, 2011), Aftermath (Pasikowski, 2012), and Ida (Pawlikowski, 2013) explore how their rural filmic landscapes are predicated on the radical exclusion of Jewish neighbours, prompting archaeological processes of exhumation. Arguing that the distressing materiality of decomposition disturbs cinematic composition, the book examines how Poland’s aftermath cinema attempts to recompose itself through form and narrative as it faces Polish complicity in Jewish death.
Содержание
1. Aftermath cinema: unwanted knowledge, unwanted images.- 2. Earth and bone: framing posthumous materialities.- 3. Posthumous landscapes and the earth-archive: archaeology, ethics and
Birthplace.- 4.
Aftermath’s cinematic séance: anamorphosis, spectrality, and sentient matter.- 5. The fabric with its rend: framing grief, materialising loss, and
Ida’s temporalities.- 6. A film found on a scrapheap: abjection,
informe, and
It Looks Pretty From A Distance
Об авторе
Matilda Mroz is Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia. Prior to this she was a Senior Lecturer at the University of Sussex, a British Academy Mid-Career Fellow and Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of several works on cinema, including
Temporality and Film Analysis (2012).