Curing Hitchcock’s vertigo. A second dance with Rancière

Authors

  • Joshua M. Hall University of Alabama. Estados Unidos
  • Leandro Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento. Argentina

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46553/tab.24.2024.p46-59

Keywords:

Jacques Rancière, Alfred Hitchcock, Dziga Vertov, Vertigo, Dance

Abstract

Building on my previous exploration of the role of dance in the contemporary French political philosopher Jacques Rancière’s Aisthesis: Scenes from the Aesthetic Regime of Art, first published in French in 2011, the present essay turns to another book originally published in the same year, The Intervals of Cinema. Having previously established that the core of Rancière’s philosophical method is an analysis of philosophical homonyms into figurative dancing conceptual partners, I begin by applying that method to the first chapter of Intervals, “Cinematic Vertigo: Hitchcock to Vertov and Back”. There I identify two series of such dancing partners, as follows: Hitchcock’s image-controlling, capitalist vertiginous fall, and Vertov’s movement-equalizing, communist balanced dance. I then critique the implicit marginalizing of women and female bodies in the films and chapter, including Hitchcock’s protagonist’s best friend and ex-fiancé, and Vertov’s cosmetologists and switchboard operators. Finally, I offer a corrective from the proto-feminist life of my grandmother, a onetime cosmetologist, switchboard operator, and Glamour Shots amateur model, my grandmother, Louise Nunnelley, or “Mamaw. .Such are the unacknowledged material basis of Rancière’s radical democratic philosophy, the specifically-embodied and positioned female dancers who continue to get lost in his figurative dance.

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Author Biographies

Joshua M. Hall, University of Alabama. Estados Unidos

Joshua M. Hall obtuvo su doctorado en la Universidad de Vanderbilt, y su investigación enfoca diversas perspectivas históricas y geográficas en los límites de la filosofía, particularmente en la intersección de la estética, la psicología y la justicia social. Esto incluye setenta y dos artículos en revistas académicas revisadas por pares (incluyendo The Pluralist, Philosophy and Literature y Essays in Criticism de la Universidad de Oxford), dos de los cuales han sido recientemente republicados en traducción al español, así como diez capítulos en antologías y la coedición (junto con Sarah Tyson) de Philosophy Imprisoned: The Love of Wisdom in the Age of Mass Incarceration. Finalmente, su trabajo relacionado en las artes incluye una nominación (por los editores de la revista literaria Verdad) para su inclusión en la 16ª edición anual de Best of the Net Anthology, una colección mini-chapbook (Bachata Adobe), y poemas en numerosas revistas literarias (recientemente incluyendo North Dakota Quarterly, Folio, Off the Coast, y Roanoke Review), además de treinta años de experiencia en danza.

Leandro, Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento. Argentina

Leandro Abel Cuellar, reside en Buenos Aires y se encuentra a punto de concluir su formación académica en el Profesorado de Nivel Medio y Superior en la Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento (Los Polvorines).

References

Dent, M. (2019). The Last Five Glamour Shots Locations in the United States. The New York Times, 10 May 2019: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/10/style/glamour-shots-1990s.html.

Hall, J. (2017). St. Vitus’ Women of Color: Dancing with Hegel. Comparative and Continental Philosophy. 9, 1, pp. 43-61.

Hall, J. (2022). Dancing with 4E Cognitive Science and Human Science Psychology. Middle Voices 2(2), pp. 2-15.

Hopewell, J. (3 de julio de 2020). How Netflix Grew Spain’s Cable Girls as it Evolved Itself. Variety: https://variety.com/2020/tv/global/netflix-cable-girls-season-five-finale-1234696813/.

Linderman, D. (1991). The Mise-en-Abîme in Hitchcock’s ‘Vertigo’. Cinema Journal 30, 4, pp. 51-74.

Miller, D. A. (2018). Vertigo. Film Quarterly 62(2), pp. 12-18.

Modleski, T (1988). The Women Who Knew Too Much: Hitchcock and Feminist Theory. New York: Routledge.

Pippin, R. (2017). The Philosophical Hitchcock: ‘Vertigo’ and the Anxieties of Unknowingness. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 161(4), pp. 293-298.

Rancière, J. (2011). El vértigo cinematográfico: Hitchcock-Vertov y vuelta. En Las distancias del cine. Manantial: Buenos Aires.

Wood, R. (2009). Male Desire, Male Anxiety: The Essential Hitchcock. En M. Deutelbaum y L. Poague (eds.). A Hitchcock Reader (pp. 223-233). New York: Wiley-Blackwell.

Published

07/16/2024

How to Cite

Hall, J. M., & Cuellar, L. (2024). Curing Hitchcock’s vertigo. A second dance with Rancière. Tábano, (24), 46–59. https://doi.org/10.46553/tab.24.2024.p46-59

Issue

Section

Articles