Grant, Catherine (2017) Videographic star studies and the "Late Voice": Carrie Fisher, John Hurt and Jeanne Moreau. [Video]
Video (Three videos and a research process statement)
videographic-star-studies-and-late-voice-carrie-fisher-john-hurt-and-jeanne-moreau - Published Version of Record Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial. Download (24kB) |
Abstract
Three videos: NOT A GRANDE DAME (For Jeanne Moreau); HURT VOICES (For John Hurt); and SIMULACRUM (For Carrie Fisher) In my contribution to Cinema Journal’s “Videographic Criticism” dossier, I argued that scholars might learn a lot from the forms of audiovisual portrait-homage to film stars made by artists and vidders. I have discovered this for myself, in the last six years, primarily through the process of making tribute videos for online circulation. What often happens with my tributary works is that, when news reaches me of the death of a beloved actor, I am driven to browse clips of their performances. I begin to poach these and play with them in an editing timeline. I then share the resulting video online so that it takes up its place in a flow of tributes. I make my homages as a fan and a media scholar. But, given how quickly I produce these videos and their urgent context of online “parasocial” grieving, I usually only engage in forms of material thinking while creating them. Verbalized reflections customarily come later. In the case of the three videos embedded here (see above for titles)—all produced since last December within hours of hearing of each star’s death—I am now curious that I was intuitively drawn to working with the voices of the performers. I have begun to consider this unwitting similarity using Richard Elliott’s 2015 book (The Late Voice) on time, memory, and experience in modern popular song and the use by certain singers of a “late voice.” Elliott discusses the latter in relation to (inter alia) chronology (the stage in an artist’s career); the vocal act (the ability to portray experience); retrospection (how voices “look back” or anticipate looking back); and the writing of age, experience, lateness and loss into songs. Like Elliott, I am interested in the idea that recorded voices are always “dead voices, temporarily reanimated in playback.” I am beginning to wonder, therefore, whether my making of these videos particularly turned on an auditory, rather than visual, punctum - a cognitive/affective processing of the moment of experiencing that each star’s alive "late voice” had just become their posthumous “late” one.
Metadata
Item Type: | Video |
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Keyword(s) / Subject(s): | video essay, online tribute culture, tribute videos, voice, aging |
School: | Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Creative Arts, Culture and Communication |
Research Centres and Institutes: | Moving Image, Birkbeck Institute for the (BIMI) |
Depositing User: | Catherine Grant |
Date Deposited: | 16 Jan 2018 16:28 |
Last Modified: | 09 Aug 2023 12:42 |
URI: | https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/20826 |
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