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- Title
Unsettling Perception: Screening Surveillance and the Body in Red Road.
- Authors
Watkins, Liz
- Abstract
The association of colour, sensation and the body, which is noted by Jacqueline Lichtenstein and Merleau-Ponty through their insights on colour as the disturbing of structure and form, offers a way in which to foreground a series of questions about embodiment and the discourse of vision. An analysis of the chromatics of Red Road (Dir. Andrea Arnold, UK/Denmark, 2006), which features a female protagonist who works as a surveillance officer in a CCTV control room, offers a way to echo and disrupt the 'mechanisms and techniques of reality-control' (de Lauretis 1984, 84) and to challenge what constitutes socially acceptable bodies and the cinematic institution of the image of woman. In Red Road the legible architecture of the film image emerges through the myriad colours of light reflected by a camera lens and the effacement of details in areas affected by shadow and variations in focus. The camera is almost always in motion and responsive to the gestures of the protagonist's body, signalling the potential of the chromatics of Red Road to trouble the structures of seeing familiar to cinematic representation. Colour and perception remain open to contingency and change, fostering alternative subject positions that trace the interrelations of the body - its senses and sensations - and the discourse of vision. The unsettling of perception refigures the encounter between the self and others through the imaginary or fictional worlds that remind us of the uncertainties and vulnerability of such interactions.
- Subjects
COLOR; MATERIALITY &; art; MERLEAU-Ponty, Maurice, 1908-1961; ARNOLD, Andrea, 1961-; CULTURE
- Publication
Paragraph, 2015, Vol 38, Issue 1, p101
- ISSN
0264-8334
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3366/para.2015.0149