A Horse Is A Horse, Of Course, Of Course: Animality, Transitivity, And The Double Take

SOMATECHNICS(2018)

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摘要
Lanthimos's The Lobster (2015) invites a way of looking that coincides with work done by scholars of feminist new materialism with an eye toward queering binary and static concepts of species, gender, and the relation between them. A close look at one fleeting, slow-motion image of horses racing on a track reveals a pattern of 'diffraction,' in the critically productive sense that Karen Barad uses the term, such that we see neither camera movement, human movement, nor animal movement proper, but movement that is 'of' all three bodies, but not 'in' any given one. The film perpetually defers the dichotomy between animal and human as it is classically conceived in order to reconfigure it.That diffractive pattern recurs throughout the film, in its use of slow motion, lateral camera movements, and the overlapping of multiple movements and rhythms. Throughout its running time, The Lobster suspends the process of becoming in motion, emphasizing the experiential aspect of this '-ing' that bodies do. The film draws vision sideways, rippling and redoubling itself; in the process, it shifts attention from a human state or an animal state - states that, according to conventional logic, exist on one side or another of a dividing line, and which certain types of movement might transcend - to transitivity, or the movement of movement itself.
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关键词
animetaphor, diffraction, queer, slow motion, tracking shots, trans
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