"Literary" Criticism on a Film Scene: Osgiliath

Jan 18, 2012 01:39

For those of you I'm just getting to know, in my not-online life, I'm a biblical scholar. I teach ancient Hebrew and interpretation of the Hebrew Bible to students studying for master's degrees in divinity, and I do original interpretive work on biblical texts. My particular areas of interpretive interest are literary and feminist criticism. I have ( Read more... )

pics, stuff, lotr, criticism

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Re: on "tertiary" creation ambree40 January 18 2012, 21:29:30 UTC
“where meaning inheres”

Your Anaïs Nin quote: "We don't see things as they are; we see things as we are."

Perhaps, but we can’t see “things” that aren’t there. By that I mean that something of the SPIRIT of the author’s intent must be there for the reader to see, otherwise he would see nothing at all.

You wrote “Does meaning in art inhere in the space between authorial intent and audience perception, and if so, what does that mean”.

I think it does lie in the middle ground. And that’s what makes art a living organism. Once there is no space for audience perception art is dead. But audience perception needs a sufficiently strong source in the spirit of the author’s intent.

I wonder whether we can ever know for sure about authorial intent, at least with regard to details of a book text, a film scene, etc. It seems to me that so many things depend on chance. On the inspiration of the moment, who were involved in the writing of the text, which versions were kept/lost, film scenes that ended up on the cutting room floor, etc. But, as I tried to say before, if a book/film has sufficient power to make the audience “see things” at least some of the intention of the author must have come through.

Perhaps I should explain a bit about my own background. I worked for many years as a marine biologist, with a specialization in evolutionary ecology and coral reef ecology. So, my view of the world, and art, is formed by that professional bias and I tend to see “chance-processes” everywhere. But I can still be very thankful when I read a book or see a film that is powerful enough to transport me into another world, whatever processes were involved in the making. LOTR, both books and films have done that for me as nothing else.

Just one more remark about Elijah’s acting. I agree that he lets the character take over. IMHO, that is what makes him so unique.

Thanks again for the beautiful post and the thought provoking novel. :)

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