Aesthetics of Care: Caring for the Mother with Chantal Akerman

Humanities Pub Date : 2024-05-22 DOI:10.3390/h13030079
Tingting Hui
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Abstract

Caring for the other is an ethical as well as an aesthetic question: but where does one end and where does the other begin? Rita Charon, in her work Narrative Medicine (2006), builds a strong case against such separation in medical care, or more precisely, against the negligence of what she calls “narrative competence”—defined as the ability to absorb, interpret, and translate stories of others. Charon compares the work of health professionals to that of a skilled translator, who reads not only words but also silences and metaphors. While Charon focuses primarily on developing the concept of care as aesthetic experience for health professionals, Yuriko Saito’s recent publication Aesthetics of Care (2022) draws a parallel between care ethics in general and aesthetic experience. Both, according to Saito, share the same attitudes such as open-mindedness, receptivity, respect, and collaborative spirit. In this paper, I will discuss the concept of care in Belgian film director Chantal Akerman’s later works: My Mother Laughs (2019) and No Home Movie (2015). Through different media—the former being a memoir and the latter a documentary—Akerman cares for her mother and bears witness to the end of her mother’s life. Taking cues from Charon and Saito, I argue that both media are media of care: they are aesthetic means of bearing witness to illness, trauma, love, and care. Especially through filmmaking, Akerman seems to have achieved the impossible: that is, the desire of the daughter not to take her eyes off her dying mother and look at her eternally. Such desire is also expressed in her film aesthetics: the long take inscribes a waiting becoming infinite; it is as if the movie, or the motion picture, is exposed to both a slow death and a passage to eternity. At the same time, unlike Charon and Saito, who position the carer as an ideal reader and viewer, I argue that Akerman as the carer is by no means perfect: her memoir offers a detailed account of her need to keep a distance and hide from her mother, and of her mother’s complaint about Akerman not sharing her life with her. Distance is what Akerman struggles with regarding her relation to her mother, and she struggles with it through writing and filming. In Akerman’s case, the ability to achieve the impossible with aesthetic media lies precisely in mediation and mediality: they enable a relation of care that is close, yet still maintains a safe distance.
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关爱美学与尚塔尔-阿克曼一起关爱母亲
关爱他人既是一个道德问题,也是一个美学问题:但两者的终点在哪里?丽塔-夏隆(Rita Charon)在她的著作《叙事医学》(Narrative Medicine,2006 年)中提出了一个强有力的理由来反对医疗护理中的这种分离,或者更准确地说,反对忽视她所说的 "叙事能力"--即吸收、解释和翻译他人故事的能力。夏隆将医疗专业人员的工作比作熟练的翻译,他们不仅能读懂文字,还能读懂沉默和隐喻。夏隆主要侧重于为医疗专业人员提出护理作为审美体验的概念,而斋藤百合子(Yuriko Saito)最近出版的《护理美学》(2022 年)则将一般护理伦理与审美体验相提并论。斋藤认为,两者都具有相同的态度,如开放的心态、接受能力、尊重和协作精神。在本文中,我将讨论比利时电影导演尚塔尔-阿克曼(Chantal Akerman)后期作品中的关怀概念:我的母亲在笑》(2019 年)和《没有家庭电影》(2015 年)。阿克曼通过不同的媒介--前者是回忆录,后者是纪录片--关爱母亲,见证母亲生命的终结。借鉴夏龙和斋藤的观点,我认为这两种媒介都是关怀的媒介:它们是见证疾病、创伤、爱和关怀的美学手段。尤其是通过电影制作,阿克曼似乎实现了一个不可能的愿望:即女儿不希望将视线从垂死的母亲身上移开,永远注视着她。这种渴望也表现在她的电影美学中:长镜头刻画了一种变得无限的等待;仿佛电影或动态影像既暴露在缓慢的死亡中,又通向永恒。同时,与夏龙和斋藤将照顾者定位为理想的读者和观众不同,我认为作为照顾者的阿克曼绝非完美无缺:她的回忆录中详细描述了她需要与母亲保持距离、躲避母亲,以及母亲抱怨阿克曼不与她分享自己的生活。距离感是阿克曼在与母亲的关系上所挣扎的,她通过写作和拍摄与之抗争。在阿克曼的作品中,美学媒体实现不可能的能力恰恰在于中介性和媒介性:它们促成了一种既亲密又保持安全距离的关怀关系。
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