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    Film After Authority: the Transition to Democracy and the End of Politics

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    Date
    2017-05-01
    Author
    Heck, Kalling
    Department
    English
    Advisor(s)
    Patrice Petro
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    Abstract
    A comparison of films made after the transition from authoritarianism or totalitarianism to democracy, this dissertation addresses the ways that cinema can digest and extend moments of political transition. By comparing films from four different nations—the Italian Germany Year Zero, Hungarian Sátántangó, South Korean Woman on the Beach, and American Medium Cool—in relation to ideas drawn from critical and political theory, this project examines how and why these wildly diverse films turn to ambiguity as their primary means to disrupt the ravages of unchecked authority. By intervening in discussions of aesthetics and politics, this dissertation contends that ambiguous aesthetics has the capacity to help us see the world differently, and is therefore productive for any revolutionary undertaking. Accounting for questions of art and authority more broadly, this project examines the perhaps impossible task of creating a work of art that can at once create meaning and reject its own authority. The significant conclusion of my project, then, is that ambiguity is a coherent response to the end of authoritarian politics, but that its total rejection of authority always rediscovers the difficulties of inaction and ineffectiveness that arise from the assumption that extension and waiting are the only solutions that can yield radical change.
    Subject
    Aesthetics
    Ambiguity
    Art Cinema
    Authoritarianism
    Global Cinema
    Political Transition
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91322
    Type
    dissertation
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    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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