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1 - Moving Body, Moving Pictures: The Emergence of Cinematic Pedestrianism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2024

Asli Özgen
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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Summary

Abstract

This chapter analyses the philosophy of movement that informed the scientific studies of human locomotion in the nineteenth century, before the rise of the Lumiere cinématographe. It contextualizes the use of the photographic method and wearable media to extend the scientific understanding of walking. Through a comparative analysis of Eadweard Muybridge's and Etienne-Jules Marey's studies, it explores the visual aesthetics that resulted from the ever-growing obsession with capturing movement in its continuous flow. The oeuvre of these two influential names in the history of moving images is thus crucial to an examination of the nascent visual aesthetics of temporality and spatiality in the representation of human stride, which eventually contributed to the visual vocabulary of cinematic pedestrianism.

Keywords: Walking, human locomotion, wearable media, instantaneous Photography

The history of the cinematic image of walking is undeniably underpinned by the contested ideals of the human body in nineteenth-century Europe. The rise of the factory and the industrialist model of production led to the praise for an abled, inexhaustible body which, as one moving part of the industrial process, would be efficiently integrated into automation. This quest concurred with the growing emphasis placed on physical robustness in the wake of the Napoleonic wars. Education policies, health programmes, and scientific research were geared towards improving the capabilities of the body. Physical fitness was praised as the precondition for a strong mind and the key to scientific and, ultimately, socio-economic progress. The disciplines of anatomy, physiognomy, eugenics, anthropology, and ethnography prospered in this context. The invention of photography and subsequent technical advancements that shortened exposure time presented scientists with new opportunities to study the human body and locomotion.

Early practitioners such as Eadweard Muybridge and Etienne-Jules Marey photographed the human stride extensively in mid- to late 1800s. Chronophotography, and later on cinematography, were consulted as effective methods of registering the locomotion of the abled body as well as so-called aberrations, such as gendered, racialized, or diseased bodies. Fatimah Tobing Rony explains the colonialist male gaze that characterized the pathologized depictions of racialized bodies, especially in the early photographic and cinematographic images of walking.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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