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Cinema Pessimism - A Political Theory of Representation and Reciprocity (Paperback)
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Cinema Pessimism - A Political Theory of Representation and Reciprocity (Paperback)
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Aesthetic and political representation are often treated
separately, but this book argues that film offers a unique
perspective through which to understand the dangers to equality and
freedom that lurk in representative politics. The potential
problems of representative democracy have long been debated: does
it cultivate apathy and discourage citizen participation? What does
it mean to be faithfully or well represented in a democracy? And
how can appropriate, meaningful representation be achieved? Here,
these questions are addressed from a new perspective.
Representation, Joshua Foa Dienstag argues, can create the illusion
of freedom and reciprocity in place of the real thing, and in both
cinema and politics, what gives us pleasure is not the same as what
secures or supports our existence as free and equal citizens. As
this book shows, there are political dangers not visible within the
current debates around democratic representation, dangers we can
better understand and help to minimize by considering the way that
human beings interact, emotionally, with their filmic
representations. Dienstag looks at a series of films that directly
confront issues of representation (Her, Blade Runner, The Man Who
Shot Liberty Valance, Melancholia, and the Up documentary series)
to diagnose these hazards and consider how best to respond to them.
Each chapter looks at a specific film as emblematic of a different
conception or problem of representation often ignored by mainstream
political debates (such as reciprocity, happiness, boundaries,
evil) to show that the relationship between representation and
freedom is fraught with tension. This book continues Dienstag's
earlier groundbreaking work on philosophical pessimism, understood
not as something despairing, but as a rejection of the idea that
these necessary tensions can be cured. Ultimately, Dienstag seeks
to defend a kind of pessimistic politics that might produce a
better sort of democratic representation than what we have today.
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