Relics of the Unseen Presence? Evocations of Native American Indian Heritage and Western-Hero Road Poems in Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux and Quixote

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Kornelia Boczkowska
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract In this paper I discuss the ways in which Bruce Baillie’s Mass for the Dakota Sioux (1964) and Quixote (1965) evoke Native American Indian heritage and western-hero road poems by challenging the concept of the American landscape and incorporating conventions traditionally associated with cinéma pur, cinéma vérité, and the city symphony. Both pictures, seen as largely ambiguous and ironic travelogue forms, expose their audiences to “the sheer beauty of the phenomenal world” (Sitney 2002: 182) and nurture nostalgic feelings for the lost indigenous civilizations, while simultaneously reinforcing the image of an American conquistador, hence creating a strong sense of dialectical tension. Moreover, albeit differing in a specific use of imagery and editing, the films rely on dense, collage-like and often superimposed images, which clearly contribute to the complexity of mood conveyed on screen and emphasize the striking conceptual contrast between white American and Indian culture. Taking such an assumption, I argue that although frequently referred to as epic road poems obliquely critical of the U.S. westward expansion and manifest destiny, the analyzed works’ use of plot reduction, observational and documentary style as well as kinaesthetic visual modes and rhythmic editing derive primarily from the cinéma pur’s camerawork, the cinéma vérité’s superstructure, and the city symphony’s spatial arrangement of urban environments. Such multifaceted inspirations do not only diversify Mass’ and Quixote’s non-narrative aesthetics, but also help document an intriguing psychogeography of the 1960s American landscapes, thus making a valuable contribution to the history of experimental filmmaking dealing with Native American Indian heritage.
看不见的存在的遗物?布鲁斯·贝利为达科塔苏族人和吉诃德所作的弥撒中对美国土著印第安人遗产和西部英雄道路诗歌的唤起
摘要在本文中,我讨论了Bruce Baillie的《达科他苏弥撒》(1964年)和《吉诃德》(1965年)通过挑战美国景观的概念,并融入传统上与cinéma pur、cinémavérité和城市交响乐相关的惯例,唤起美洲印第安人遗产和西方英雄公路诗的方式。这两张照片在很大程度上都被视为模糊和讽刺的游记形式,让观众看到“现象世界的纯粹之美”(Sitney 2002:182),并培养对逝去的土著文明的怀旧情绪,同时强化了美国征服者的形象,从而产生了强烈的辩证张力。此外,尽管在图像和剪辑的具体使用上有所不同,但这些电影依赖于密集的、拼贴式的、经常叠加的图像,这显然增加了屏幕上传达的情绪的复杂性,并强调了美国白人和印度文化之间惊人的概念对比。基于这样的假设,我认为,尽管经常被称为史诗般的公路诗,间接批评美国的西部扩张和明显的命运,但被分析的作品对情节缩减、观察和纪录片风格以及动觉视觉模式和节奏编辑的使用主要源于cinéma pur的摄影作品、cinémavérité的上层建筑,以及城市交响乐对城市环境的空间安排。这些多方面的灵感不仅使Mass和Quixode的非叙事美学多样化,而且有助于记录20世纪60年代美国风景的有趣心理地理学,从而为处理美洲原住民印第安人遗产的实验电影制作史做出了宝贵贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
Studia Anglica Posnaniensia Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
15 weeks
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