The Voyeur and the Screen. Literary Paradigms of the Man who Looks

The essay is inspired by the consideration of the essentially ancipient nature of the screen as an image support: on the one hand the screen is something that hides, protects and separates; on the other hand, especially in recent modernity, it becomes the device par excellence of the opening of visi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Federico Fastelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UNICApress 2018-11-01
Series:Between
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/3362
Description
Summary:The essay is inspired by the consideration of the essentially ancipient nature of the screen as an image support: on the one hand the screen is something that hides, protects and separates; on the other hand, especially in recent modernity, it becomes the device par excellence of the opening of vision, and therefore the essential frame of the image. Through some famous twentieth-century examples, taken from W. Woolrich (It Had to be Murder), A. Robbe-Grillet (Le voyeur, La Jalousie), Gombrowicz (Pornografia, Cosmo), A. Moravia (L’uomo che guarda), the essay shows the function and evolution of the literary representation of what V. Stoichita called, referring to figurative art and cinema, “Sherlock effect”.
ISSN:2039-6597