The Anthrobiogeomorphic Machine: Stalking the Zone of Cinema

Film-Philosophy 15 (1):118-139 (2011)
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Abstract

This article proposes an ecophilosophy of the cinema. It builds on Martin Heidegger’s articulation of art as ‘world-disclosing,’ and on a Whiteheadian and Deleuzian understanding of the universe as a lively and eventful place in which subjects and objects are persistently coming into being, jointly constituted in the process of their becoming. Accordingly, it proposes that cinema be considered a machine that produces or discloses worlds. These worlds are, at once, anthropomorphic, geomorphic, and biomorphic, with each of these registers mapping onto the ‘three ecologies,’ in Felix Guattari’s terms, that make up the relational ontology of the world: the social, the material, and the mental or perceptual. Through an analysis of Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker (1979), I suggest that cinema ‘stalks’ the world, and that our appreciation of its potentials should similarly involve a kind of ‘stalking’ of its effects in the material, social, and perceptual dimensions of the world from which cinema emerges and to which it returns.

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References found in this work

The Question concerning Technology and Other Essays.Martin Heidegger & William Lovitt - 1981 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 12 (3):186-188.
The Visible and the Invisible.B. Falk - 1970 - Philosophical Quarterly 20 (80):278-279.
Feminism and the Mastery of Nature.Val Plumwood - 1993 - Environmental Values 6 (2):245-246.
Reel Nature: America's Romance with Wildlife on Film.Gregg Mitman - 2000 - Journal of the History of Biology 33 (2):385-387.
Green Screen: Environmentalism and Hollywood Cinema.David Ingram - 2005 - Environmental Values 14 (4):539-543.

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