Ideology as Wound: AReading of Cristian Mungiu’s 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
John Dixon and
Catherine Redpath ()
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John Dixon: University of Lincoln
Catherine Redpath: University of Lincoln
Revista Romana de Jurnalism si Comunicare - Romanian Journal of Journalism and Communication, 2010, issue 1, 49-56
Abstract:
Traumatic experience is as old as human experience, but since the ‘terror attacks’, cultural theorists have begun to problematise the nature of trauma itself. “Trauma” in psychoanalysis, refers to the violent creation of a traumatic wound, and the uncontrollable, repetitive effects of that wound. The traumatised subject is condemned to repeatedly attempt to express and articulate the traumatic event in a vain effort to attain psychic catharsis. It is widely argued that this trauma cannot be articulated in language, thus psychological catharsis can never be attained. This paper will argue diametrically against the construction of such psychoanalytic discourses surrounding trauma. We suggest that articulation of trauma in a cultural artefact such as film, may be presented and represented in the codification of the physical body. We will illustrate this with a reading of Cristian Mungiu’s award winning 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days which associates the suffering of the physical body with the traumatic historical experience of the Romanian people under Ceausescu’s regime. This paper asserts that the cultural industries have a responsibility to tell, testify, and remind the body politic of the past. Received knowledge about trauma decrees that trauma cannot be articulated, we however, will argue that the body politic is expressed through the focalisation of the physical body thereby rendering the silence audible.
Keywords: Trauma theory; subjectivity; memory; representation; the body; ideology (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Y8 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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