3 - The Transition to Sound
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2014
Summary
Nabokov, Lewis and Garbo
For Adorno, as for Lewis, film's iconic immediacy, the mimetic spell it casts over the audience, pacifying them into submission, could be negated through a form of image-writing. The spell is broken, in Adorno's view, through montage, which ‘does not interfere with things but arranges them in a constellation akin to writing’; for Lewis, the dialectic between writing and image, or in my terms, speech and gesture, is generated through a performative prose style which thematises the double aspect of textual absence and mimetic presence. The Lewisian speech-gesture complex counteracts both iconic or performative mimesis which casts a reifying spell over the spectator, breaking down the performative body into linguistic components, and it also resists the autonomy and self-enclosure of writing, by showing forth a series of rehearsed gestures which never materialise as a finished spectacle. His aesthetic, which cannot be reduced solely to discursive or performative terms, manifests a politics which resists a totalised pre-scripted determination and disrupts the naturalising process of the universalised, transcendental reader-spectator.
In Lewis's view, the newly dominant form of Hollywood naturalism and its narrative conventions reduced spectator-subjects to mere consumers. For Lewis, as for Adorno, these conventions had become a new universal language, encoded according to forms of mimetic behaviour, rendering the audience passively star-struck and inducing the desire for mass mimesis.
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- The Speech-Gesture ComplexModernism, Theatre, Cinema, pp. 132 - 161Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2013