Epidemic of affect: Contagious anxiety and cinematic metaphor in She Dies Tomorrow (2020)

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Horror Studies Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1386/host_00063_1
Jennifer Kirby
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Abstract

Although written before the COVID-19 pandemic, Amy Seimetz’s She Dies Tomorrow is widely regarded as speaking to collective social anxiety. In the film, Amy is convinced that she will die the next day. She tells her friend, Jane, who becomes convinced that she too will die. Everyone that Jane tells catches the conviction and it spreads like a virus. This article offers an alternative reading, analysing the film as a meditation on (horror) cinema as a vehicle for affective bodily contagion. Filmic images and sounds are intangible and do not physically touch viewers yet can nevertheless carry affect that makes bodies respond to and sometimes replicate what is shown on screen. Similarly, in She Dies Tomorrow, an intangible idea causes affective response and mimesis, as well as audio-visual hallucinations. The article explores how contagious anxiety might be spread through cinematic objects, drawing from affect, phenomenology and object-oriented ontology (OOO). Finally, it explores the film’s engagement with both Derrida’s spectrality of cinema and the nature of the horror genre.
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情感的流行:《她明日死去》中的传染性焦虑和电影隐喻
尽管Amy Seimetz的《她明天就死了》是在新冠肺炎大流行之前写的,但人们普遍认为它表达了集体的社会焦虑。在电影中,艾米确信自己第二天就会死。她告诉了她的朋友简,简确信她也会死。简告诉的每个人都会被定罪,并像病毒一样传播。这篇文章提供了另一种阅读方式,将这部电影分析为对(恐怖)电影作为情感身体传染工具的沉思。电影图像和声音是无形的,不会接触到观众,但却能产生影响,使身体对屏幕上显示的内容做出反应,有时甚至会复制。同样,在《她明天就死了》中,一个无形的想法会引起情感反应和模仿,以及视听幻觉。本文从情感、现象学和面向对象本体论(OOO)的角度探讨了传染性焦虑是如何通过电影对象传播的。最后,它探讨了这部电影与德里达电影的幽灵性和恐怖类型的本质之间的关系。
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来源期刊
Horror Studies
Horror Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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