posted on 2023-08-30, 15:27authored bySophie Jackson
This paper will explore the concept of Memory Affect - bringing together current thinking on affect in cinema and affect in the experiencing of memory by making specific reference to Terrence Malick’s feature film The Tree of Life (2011) and Ross McElwee’s documentary Photographic Memory (2011).
In Photographic Memory, McElwee’s sixth wry autobiographical documentary since his groundbreaking film Sherman’s March, the director articulates the experiences of memory and it’s fragmentary subjective nature in relation to the photographic image, both moving and still, analogue and digital. Although not specifically stated, McElwee’s insights illustrate the notion of a Memory Affect. Building on the ideas exposed by McElwee, this paper also considers Malick’s equally personal Palme d’Or- winning The Tree of Life, where the director evokes memory within a fictional context, not only representing memory but also positioning the viewer within the act of remembering, creating an affective memory experience.
With it’s particular ability to represent time and space, cinema is not only a metaphor for memory but also constitutive of memory, and this paper considers another layer of overlap – that of the affective, embodied experience of remembering, of calling the past into present. Drawing on a range of theoretical works, this paper uses these two very different films to explore the notion of Memory Affect and the creation of a memory experience shared between the viewer, the filmmaker and the memory.
History
Page range
328-334
Publisher
Cine Clube de Avanca
Place of publication
Avanca, Portugal
ISBN
978-989-96858-4-0
Conference proceeding
AVANCA / CINEMA 2014 - International Conference Cinema - Art, Technology, Communication
Name of event
AVANCA / CINEMA 2014
Location
Avanca, Portugal
Event start date
2014-07-26
Event finish date
2014-07-31
File version
Accepted version
Language
eng
Legacy posted date
2018-07-05
Legacy creation date
2018-07-05
Legacy Faculty/School/Department
ARCHIVED Faculty of Arts, Law & Social Sciences (until September 2018)