Toward a Model of Distributed Affectivity for Cinematic Ethics

Philip W. Martin
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Abstract

Many contemporary applications of theories of affect to cinematic ethical experience focus on its consequences for empathy and moral allegiance. Such approaches have made advances in bridging phenomenological and cognitivist approaches to film-philosophy, but miss the importance of complex affects that problematize empathy and moral judgment. For example, the rendering of trauma in Aimless Bullet (Hyun-mok Yu, 1961) involves aesthetic shifts that reframe its depiction of postwar experience and build a complex emotional picture of sociopolitical conditions that affect individual and community life. In this article, I argue that to understand the ethical significance of complex cinematic emotion we can develop an account of how affective-aesthetic affordances establish distributed spaces for dynamic affective engagement. To do this, I draw upon theories of scaffolded mind, classical Indian rasa aesthetics, and phenomenological aesthetics. This hybrid account will allow us to articulate the ways that film can help us comprehend the ethical significance of complex affective situations.
面向电影伦理的分布式情感模型
情感理论在电影伦理经验中的许多当代应用都集中在其对移情和道德忠诚的影响上。这些方法在将现象学和认知主义方法连接到电影哲学方面取得了进展,但忽略了复杂影响的重要性,这些影响使移情和道德判断成为问题。例如,《漫无目的的子弹》(Yu Hyun-mok, 1961)对创伤的渲染涉及美学上的转变,这种转变重新构建了对战后经历的描绘,并构建了一幅影响个人和社区生活的社会政治条件的复杂情感画面。在本文中,我认为,为了理解复杂电影情感的伦理意义,我们可以发展一种关于情感美学启示如何为动态情感参与建立分布式空间的描述。为了做到这一点,我借鉴了脚手架思维理论,古典印度rasa美学和现象学美学。这种混合的叙述将使我们能够清晰地表达电影可以帮助我们理解复杂情感情境的伦理意义的方式。
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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