修复彩色装饰

IF 0.7 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Phoebe Chen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章分析了1986年第一部成功的特艺彩色电影《大海的代价》(1922)的修复,它引用了《蝴蝶夫人》的比喻和亚洲女性的幻想,以扩大其色彩新奇的奇观。修复者们努力重建影片的双色方案,并使用一台老式的分束式特艺彩色相机拍摄了新的镜头,记录了在恢复的底片中缺失的叙事最终的自杀。通过追踪这两种构成缺失——我称之为“黄女人”的人物最初的自杀和她的死亡场景的重塑,她的肉体存在被剥夺了——这篇文章将恢复和种族化作为再现可见性物质条件的类似过程。我利用这次修复对某些形式的连续性和完成性的认知投资——技术的、美学的、时间的——来研究电影档案实践如何使受种族和殖民常识限制的历史认识方式永久化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Restoring the Technicolor Ornament
This article analyzes the 1986 restoration of the first successful Technicolor II feature film, The Toll of the Sea (1922), which invoked Madame Butterfly tropes and fantasies of Asiatic femininity to amplify its spectacle of chromatic novelty. Restorers worked to reconstitute the film’s two-color scheme and used an antique beam-splitting Technicolor camera to shoot new footage of the narrative’s definitive suicide, which was missing from the recovered negative. By tracing these two constitutive absences—the initial suicide of the figure I call the “yellow woman” and the remade scenes of her death, voided of her corporeal presence—this article takes up restoration and racialization as analogous processes that reproduce material conditions of visibility. I use this restoration’s epistemic investment in certain forms of continuity and completion—technological, aesthetic, temporal—to examine how film archival practices can perpetuate historical ways of knowing circumscribed by racial and colonial common sense.
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来源期刊
Feminist Media Histories
Feminist Media Histories Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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