A cinema of sentience: The simian gaze in Godfrey Reggio’s Visitors
A cinema of sentience: The simian gaze in Godfrey Reggio’s Visitors
This article analyzes the moving portraits and the gazes of a female lowland gorilla named Triska in the film Visitors (Godfrey Reggio, 2013). By examining the formal qualities of her filmic portrayal and the biological and emotional affects portraits and gazes potentially have on the human viewer, I propose that Triska’s gazes create a ‘cinema of sentience’ that not only represent Triska as a sentient being, but affect an awareness of her sentience and subjectivity. I argue that Reggio’s filmic portraits of Triska do not position the viewer as superior to her – our gazes do not conquer or consumer her, and they do not sentimentalize her – rather, her gazes serve to equalize her for the viewer at the level of representation as well as affect, by encouraging the audience to experience a sense of affective empathy for the gorilla and her subjectivity, and to feel the sentience of the non-human Other. In the filmic encounters with Triska, humans become aware of both their humanity and their animality, producing affective moments where biology and philosophy collide – an affective encounter that questions our cognitive philosophical assumptions about what it means to be human and what it means to be animal and simian.
Affect; gaze; film phenomenology; cinema of sentience; portraits; subjectivity
25-36
Schultz, Corey Kai Nelson
4df94248-6850-4238-acb3-6e0f1a7a4205
April 2018
Schultz, Corey Kai Nelson
4df94248-6850-4238-acb3-6e0f1a7a4205
Schultz, Corey Kai Nelson
(2018)
A cinema of sentience: The simian gaze in Godfrey Reggio’s Visitors.
Moving Image Review & Art Journal (MIRAJ), 7 (1), .
(doi:10.1386/miraj.7.1.24_1).
Abstract
This article analyzes the moving portraits and the gazes of a female lowland gorilla named Triska in the film Visitors (Godfrey Reggio, 2013). By examining the formal qualities of her filmic portrayal and the biological and emotional affects portraits and gazes potentially have on the human viewer, I propose that Triska’s gazes create a ‘cinema of sentience’ that not only represent Triska as a sentient being, but affect an awareness of her sentience and subjectivity. I argue that Reggio’s filmic portraits of Triska do not position the viewer as superior to her – our gazes do not conquer or consumer her, and they do not sentimentalize her – rather, her gazes serve to equalize her for the viewer at the level of representation as well as affect, by encouraging the audience to experience a sense of affective empathy for the gorilla and her subjectivity, and to feel the sentience of the non-human Other. In the filmic encounters with Triska, humans become aware of both their humanity and their animality, producing affective moments where biology and philosophy collide – an affective encounter that questions our cognitive philosophical assumptions about what it means to be human and what it means to be animal and simian.
Text
CinemaOfSentience
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 6 February 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 April 2018
Published date: April 2018
Keywords:
Affect; gaze; film phenomenology; cinema of sentience; portraits; subjectivity
Organisations:
Film
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 406882
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406882
ISSN: 2045-6298
PURE UUID: f76fb110-8843-4bcc-9036-42a4f9520d76
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Date deposited: 25 Mar 2017 02:04
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:10
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Author:
Corey Kai Nelson Schultz
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