Mosaic pilgrim: Maya Deren’s The witch’s cradle as filmic poem, dissociative medium, and fragmented channel facilitating a pilgrimage towards ecstatic awareness through art; and, Mosaic pilgrim: poems
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Maya Deren is widely recognized for creating the ""trance film"" genre with her well-known, early work ""Meshes of Afternoon."" This dissertation explores a lesser-known, unfinished film: ""The Witch's Cradle,"" a collaboration with Surrealist artist Marcel Duchamp, which drew heavily upon a formative experience of gendered violence that Deren had suffered at the hands of a well-established male author a few years prior, as well as early-life experience of violence based upon her ethnicity, and her subsequent emigration to the United States with her family at a young age. Incorporating ideas about identity and ego formation from established Western philosophers and psychologists, as well as a feminist approach to phenomenology, this dissertation examines Deren's early fascination with femininity, violence, occult knowledge, and ecstatic, dissociative experience, ultimately arguing that her lesser-known work as a poet is furthered by ""The Witch's Cradle,"" which, though it cannot stand on its own as a finished film, might well stand alone as a visual or filmic poem. The dissertation concludes by looking forward, examining ways in which Deren's aesthetic contributions might be brought to bear in the field of literature, particularly filmic poetry.
创建时间:
2024-01-31



