Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: What is film-philosophy?
- I WHAT IS CINEMA?
- 1 Hugo Münsterberg
- 2 Vilém Flusser
- 3 Siegfried Kracauer
- 4 Theodor Adorno
- 5 Antonin Artaud
- 6 Henri Bergson
- 7 Maurice Merleau-Ponty
- 8 Emmanuel Levinas
- 9 André Bazin
- 10 Roland Barthes
- II POLITICS OF THE CINEMATIC CENTURY
- III CINEMATIC NATURE
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Siegfried Kracauer
from I - WHAT IS CINEMA?
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: What is film-philosophy?
- I WHAT IS CINEMA?
- 1 Hugo Münsterberg
- 2 Vilém Flusser
- 3 Siegfried Kracauer
- 4 Theodor Adorno
- 5 Antonin Artaud
- 6 Henri Bergson
- 7 Maurice Merleau-Ponty
- 8 Emmanuel Levinas
- 9 André Bazin
- 10 Roland Barthes
- II POLITICS OF THE CINEMATIC CENTURY
- III CINEMATIC NATURE
- Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Siegfried Kracauer (1889–1966) studied architecture and engineering in Germany, where he worked as an architect until 1920. He was a film critic for newspapers and magazines from 1920 to 1950, first in Frankfurt and Berlin, then in Paris from 1933, after his forced emigration as a Jewish left-wing intellectual after the Nazis came to power, and finally in New York from 1941. His two major books on film are From Caligari to Hitler (1947) and Theory of Film (1960).
With Siegfried Kracauer, the relationship of cinema to philosophy is peculiar. From his reviews and essays on modern culture to his books written in America, Kracauer's cinema theory is not primarily about films, film-makers, cultures or media technologies. Rather, cinema is itself something comparable to philosophy; as Kracauer describes, it is “an approach to the world, a mode of human existence” (1960: li). He conceives of cinema as a never entirely normal mode of perception, sensation, thought – and sometimes enlightenment. “All that remains of the ‘art with a difference’ in late Kracauer is the subjectivity which constitutes it” (Schlüpmann 1987: 107). In the end, Kracauer sees in, or rather through, cinema a mode of experience in rivalry with philosophy and art; he calls it “history”.
Long before cinema is history Kracauer equates it to capitalist economy: “The form of free-time busy-ness necessarily corresponds to the form of business” (1995: 325). In his 1926 essay “Cult of Distraction”, busy-ness/business – the same word Betrieb in the original – designates the fragmented mobility experienced both in film and in factory or office work.
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- Film, Theory and PhilosophyThe Key Thinkers, pp. 40 - 50Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2009