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The texture of memory and the ability of art and film to bear
witness to traumatic events are delicately approached in this
book-length essay by a Mekas cinephile. For years, filmmaker
Peter Delpeut has had Jonas Mekas's Movie
Journal within easy reach of his desk. Since his student
days, he has been a great admirer of the Lithuanian-American
‘Godfather of avant-garde cinema’. Until he was startled in
June 2018 by an article in The New York Review of Books. Historian
Michael Casper claimed that Mekas had deliberately forgotten or
misrepresented certain events during World War II. Seeded by this
controversy over Mekas’s memories of his Lithuanian youth and
Mekas’s pain over his subsequent exile, Delpeut’s essayistic
and self-reflective book flowers into an inquiry about memory and
forgetting; the moral compass of the future that cannot find its
bearing in the past; the abilities of art to witness; and the roles
we all must play in writing the adequate history of events too
traumatic for a just accounting. Although there is little
doubt that Mekas himself never participated in the horrors of the
Holocaust in Lithuania, his silence about the fate of his Jewish
countrymen and neighbors could be said to enable a rewriting of
history, at the sacrifice of witness testimonies. As Delpeut
follows Mekas through films, diaries, his public performances, his
speeches, and finally his testimony given to the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), he encounters an impasse for
which he was not prepared.
Sparked by a groundbreaking Amsterdam workshop titled "Disorderly
Order: Colours in Silent Film," scholarly and archival interest in
colour as a crucial aspect of film form, technology and aesthetics
has enjoyed a resurgence in the past twenty years. In the spirit of
the workshop, this anthology brings together international experts
to explore a diverse range of themes that they hope will inspire
the next twenty years of research on colour in silent film. Taking
an interdisciplinary approach, the book explores archival
restoration, colour film technology, colour theory, and
experimental film alongside beautifully saturated images of silent
cinema.
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