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5 - ‘Disney against the metaphysicals’: Eisenstein, Pound, Ectoplasm and the Politics of Animation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Leigh Wilson
Affiliation:
University of Westminster
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Summary

‘—”You sit stiller” said Kokka

“if whenever you move something jangles.”‘

Ezra Pound, Canto 74

As we have seen in Chapter 4, the work of both Dziga Vertov and Sergei Eisenstein shows a tension between realism as faithfulness to the truth of the world on one hand and realism as reproducing the myths of bourgeois capitalism on the other. For Vertov, facts were central in overcoming this problematic of representation, as expressed in his rejection of actors, filmscripts, created scenarios, and so on. For Eisenstein, however, the relation between the facts of world and their reproduction on the screen was in some ways more complex. He criticised Vertov and kino-eye in general for misunderstanding this relation. In ‘The Problem of the Materialist Approach to Form’ (1925), Eisenstein argues that kino-eye merely reproduces the world rather reconstructing it to a particular ideological end:

Like the well-known Impressionist, Cine-Eye, sketchbook in hand (!), rushes after objects as they are without rebelliously interrupting the inevitability of the statics of the causal connection between them, without overcoming this connection through a powerful social-organisation motive but yielding to its ‘cosmic’ pressure.

(Eisenstein 2010: 63; emphasis in original)
Type
Chapter
Information
Modernism and Magic
Experiments with Spiritualism, Theosophy and the Occult
, pp. 135 - 167
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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