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Learning to See With Ozu, Or an Inquiry Into the Non-Modern Conditions of a Media-Anthropology of Gestures

Publikace na Filozofická fakulta |
2021

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

Recent occidental research, following above all the work of Agamben (2000) has opened an inquiry into gesturality in general, and the gesture in and through cinema in particular. Much of this research has been done in media studies and linked, via Mauss, to anthropologies of technology and the image (Schüttpelz 2010).

Here, I aim to experiment with cosmotechnics (Hui 2017) and will propose a way to think gesture with a Buddhist world-making project. This thought process will happen through the very concrete work of Ozu Yasujirō, who developed an idiosyncratic style that enables the appearance of gestures (Hasumi 1997).

In demonstrating how certain cinematic techniques tie in with Buddhist ways of thought and how they can engender a different attunement to the impermanence of not only the gestural, I will point toward the force of the technology of cinema in constructing different possible worlds within and without academia.