Title
Cinema and choric connection: Lost in translation as sensual experience
Abstract
The rise of the new information technologies, and corresponding proliferation of signs, images, and information, has contributed to a growing sense of alienation and dislocation. For many, the contemporary moment is an unending and disorienting sea of sensory-symbolic excesses. Lost in Translation is a film addressed to these anxieties. Engaging the film as a sensual experience, we argue that Lost in Translation equips viewers to confront the feelings of alienation and dislocation brought on by the sensorysymbolic excesses of (post)modernity by fostering a sense of choric connection. This sense, we demonstrate, is elicited primarily by the film's material (nonsymbolic, aesthetic) dimensions. Drawing on an analysis of the film's aesthetic elements, we conclude by reflecting on the implications for film studies, rhetorical studies, and everyday life.
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/00335630.2011.608704
Keywords
Affect, Lost in translation, Materiality, Semiotic chōra, Sensual experience
Publication Date
11-1-2011
Recommended Citation
Ott, Brian L., and Diane Marie Keeling. "Cinema and choric connection: Lost in Translation as sensual experience." Quarterly Journal of Speech 97, no. 4 (2011): 363-386.
Journal Title
Quarterly Journal of Speech