The mosaic film: nomadic style and politics in transnational media culture
| Authors | |
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| Publication date | 2011 |
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| Book title | Art and visibility in migration culture: conflict, resistance and agency |
| ISBN |
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| Series | Thamyris intersecting: place, sex, and race, 23 |
| Pages (from-to) | 175-190 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam [etc.]: Rodopi |
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| Abstract |
In contemporary media culture the formal, narrative, and stylistic structures that are most pervasive can be described as an aesthetics of the mosaic. Multiple main characters, multiple interwoven story-lines, multiple or fragmented spaces, different timezones or paces seem to be specifically apt for engaging with the migratory nature and politics of our times. In this essay, I will look at Babel (USA: González Iñárritu, 2006), WWW. What a Wonderful World (Morocco/Germany/France: Bensaidi, 2006), and
Kicks (Netherlands: Ter Heerdt, 2007). In relation to these films I will discuss the ways in which an aesthetics of the mosaic is related to migratory movements and contemporary globalized media culture.1 This aesthetics, I will argue, is closely related to transnationalism, which can assume different forms. Its style and politics can be characterized as nomadic, a concept that should be understood in its Nietzschean implications of mixing heterogeneous codes and referring to the Outside world. By means of a nomadic style and nomadic politics these films assert a Deleuzian "becoming-minoritarian" as everyone’s affair. |
| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Published at | http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/rodopi/tham/2011/00000023/00000001/art00011 |
| Downloads |
Thamyris_23_10_-_Patricia_Pisters__Mosaic_Film_.pdf
(Final published version)
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| Permalink to this page | |
