“The Hum of the Conversing Audience”: Ordinary Criticism and Film Culture in American Early Film Theory

This article seeks to explore the early stages of American film theory, where cinephilia became a site of aesthetic interest and criticism thanks to the theorization of cinema as a conversational medium. Following Stanley Cavell’s analysis of a distinct form of moviegoing in America, based on the ca...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Statius Marthe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2023-08-01
Series:Open Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opphil-2022-0251
Description
Summary:This article seeks to explore the early stages of American film theory, where cinephilia became a site of aesthetic interest and criticism thanks to the theorization of cinema as a conversational medium. Following Stanley Cavell’s analysis of a distinct form of moviegoing in America, based on the casual conversation about movies, I argue that a reinterpretation of Emerson’s ordinary aesthetics has been at the core of early film theory, especially in Vachel Lindsay’s writings. In order to illustrate the relation between the defence of a new medium and the attempt to define a quintessentially American art form, this article focuses on the concept of “conversation” that Lindsay uses to describe film spectatorship and to provide a new critical apparatus to grasp the specificity of film aesthetics.
ISSN:2543-8875