Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Images
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Themes – The Framed Hand and Being
- 2 Symbolism – The Semiotic Hand
- 3 Aesthetics – The Stylised Hand: Beauty, Ugliness, Genre
- 4 Narration – Hands Doing and Being
- 5 Characterisation – Hands and Identity
- Concluding Case Study – Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975)
- Filmography
- Index
1 - Themes – The Framed Hand and Being
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Images
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Themes – The Framed Hand and Being
- 2 Symbolism – The Semiotic Hand
- 3 Aesthetics – The Stylised Hand: Beauty, Ugliness, Genre
- 4 Narration – Hands Doing and Being
- 5 Characterisation – Hands and Identity
- Concluding Case Study – Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975)
- Filmography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter considers how directors have used the hand as primary instrument to explore key ideas in their films. It offers close readings of several films that establish human decision, desire, agency, and potency as their principal concerns, and it presents a variety of ways in which metaphysical and ontotheological questions have been rendered on screen. It looks at films that have something to say directly about the labouring human hand: whether Marxist ideas about industrialisation, Lukács’ notion of reification of the working subject, or questions about the changing conditions of work in the modern age. Within the context of debates around free will and determinism, and representations of individuals who suffer manual dispossession, it evaluates films that ask ethical and moral questions about the disempowerment of suppressed, minority, or marginalised individuals and groups.
Key Words: Free will and determinism; gendered labour; creativity; origins; consciousness
Natural and Supernatural Phenomena: Matter Becoming Consciousness
Mary Shelley's Doctor Frankenstein's Monster and James Cameron's John Connor's Model 101 were very much creatures of their time. As their designations – Monster and Model – attest, they were conceived and projected into science fiction contexts that reflected the contemporary states of positivistic knowledge and experimentation at the periods of their conceptualisation. But although they are separated by two centuries of scientific progress, the fundamental questions invited by both characters and by those of their diegetic and extra-diegetic inventors, have not altered much. Foremost among these are the interrelated themes of the origin of sentient life and man's relationship with, and capacity for, intervention into the process of the creation of intelligent, living beings. As much as both stories interrogate the appropriateness of man's ‘playing God’, they demand reflection on the consequences of his having done so for society at large, for the designer, and for the created being.
Made at roughly the historical mid-way point between the first sound cinematic adaptation of Shelley's novel, the 1931 Universal Pictures production directed by James Whale, and Cameron's second Terminator film from 1991, was Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). While Kubrick's diegesis is stretched to cover an expansive period of human history and evolution, and addresses key ethical and ontological questions, in his narrative they are confronted centrally and explicitly. Character traits and the personality of the Artificial Intelligence entity HAL are designed with some degree of futuristic creative projection.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Hands on FilmActants, Aesthetics, Affects, pp. 21 - 90Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022