Jean-Luc Godard’s Political Filmmaking

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

This book offers an examination of the political dimensions of a number of Jean-Luc Godard’s films from the 1960s to the present. The author seeks to dispel the myth that Godard’s work abandoned political questions after the 1970s and was limited to merely formal ones. The book includes a discussion of militant filmmaking and Godard’s little-known films from the Dziga Vertov Group period, which were made in collaboration with Jean-Pierre Gorin. The chapters present a thorough account of Godard’s investigations on the issue of aesthetic-political representation, including his controversial juxtaposition of the Shoah and the Nakba. Emmelhainz argues that the French director’s oeuvre highlights contradictions between aesthetics and politics in a quest for a dialectical image. By positing all of Godard’s work as experiments in dialectical materialist filmmaking, from Le Petit soldat to Adieu au langage, the author brings attention to Godard’s ongoing inquiry on the role filmmakers can have in progressive political engagement.

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Chapters

Conclusion: The Legacy of Militant Filmmaking or How to Rise Above Everything That Is Dying?

Before the impending need to visibilize the intolerable brought about by permanent war everywhere, recent films and art projects have revisited militant filmmaking from the 1960s and 1970s. The legacy of Godard’s political filmmaking, however, is very far removed from his post-1970s materialist film... see more

Conditions of Visuality and Materialist Film at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century

By analyzing and comparing films Godard made between 2006 and 2014, I articulate the coherence between the filmmakers’ earlier and more recent explorations on representability, irrepresentability and representation, which became the filmmaker’s version of materialist filmmaking for the twenty-first ... see more

Representing the Unrepresentable: Restitution, Archive, Memory

This chapter is devoted to an analysis of Godard’s debate with Claude Lanzmann on the matter of the representability of horror, catastrophe and trauma, as well as on his controversial juxtaposition of the Shoah and the Nakba, for which Godard has been accused of anti-Semitism. Starting with a descri... see more

Technique and Montage: Saying, Seeing and Showing the Invisible

Once Marxist-Leninism was rejected as the framework of progressive politicized filmmaking and international solidarity relationships, Godard moved on to experiment with Anne-Marie Miéville about the means to bring about socio-political change within the framework “journalism of the audiovisual” that... see more

Elsewhere: Dialogue of Points of View: Jean-Luc Godard and Tiersmondisme

In 1969 Godard, Armand Marco and Jean-Pierre Gorin visited Palestinian training and refugee camps to make a film sponsored by the Palestinian Liberation Organization. Drawing a genealogy of Western intellectuals’ engagement with Third World struggles, I posit anxiety of blindness and the fear of bli... see more

Who Speaks Here? Jean-Luc Godard’s ‘Militant Filmmaking’

The chapter begins with an overdue exploration of Godard’s “militant filmmaking” in the context of intellectual history of May 1968 and the debates around political filmmaking in France. The lens through which I analyze Godard’s films of this period is the crisis of aesthetic and political represent... see more

Introduction

Jean-Luc Godard’s films are inscribed in a reflection on the contradictions embedded in the relationship between ethics and politics and the artists’ capacity to represent or to be involved in historical or actual political events. These interrogations translate into matters of visibility and techni... see more

Who Speaks Here? Jean-Luc Godard’s ‘Militant Filmmaking’ (1967–74)

The chapter begins with an overdue exploration of Godard’s “militant filmmaking” in the context of intellectual history of May 1968 and the debates around political filmmaking in France. The lens through which I analyze Godard’s films of this period is the crisis of aesthetic and political represent... see more

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