{"title":"在睡眠的边缘:让-马(Jean Ma)所著的《移动影像与沉睡的旁观者》(评论","authors":"Xueli Wang","doi":"10.1353/tj.2024.a929538","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>At The Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators</em> by Jean Ma <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Xueli Wang </li> </ul> <em>AT THE EDGES OF SLEEP: MOVING IMAGES AND SOMNOLENT SPECTATORS</em>. By Jean Ma. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022; pp. 209. <p>Watching a film together is a ritual of intimacy, especially if we fall asleep. In her book <em>At the Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators</em>, Jean Ma takes the familiar act of sleeping at the movies as an entry point into a wide-ranging exploration of attention, sociality, and embodiment in moving-image culture from the early twentieth century to the present. Tying this ambitious study together is the Thai artist-filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul, whose distinctly soporific œuvre Ma returns to throughout the book as a touchstone for rethinking longstanding theories of the somnolent spectator and for engaging with related works according to an alternative, sleep-woven logic. At stake in this reconceptualization is a fresh receptivity to the kinds of relations sleep can open up: between individuals, past and present, humans and nonhumans, the living and the dead. Whether in the spiritual “possession, transmutation, and reincarnation” that occupy Apichatpong’s visions of sleep (56), or the staging of collective slumber as a ritual of healing in the art installation <em>Black Womxn Dreaming/Divine the Darkness</em> (2019), Ma reads sleep as a social and relational process through which borders soften and energies circulate between self and others. “To sleep in the presence of others is to willingly abandon the fiction of self-sufficiency and autonomy,” Ma writes, “in acknowledgment of vulnerability and interdependence” (36).</p> <p>At the outset, Ma situates her project within a recent “turn to sleep” in critical and popular discourse, in which “[t]he traditionally suspicious view of sleep—as a thief of time, an obstacle to progress . . . gives way to an attitude of solicitousness and respect” (10). This encompasses the emergence of overnight installations in contemporary art; the rise of “critical sleep studies” in academia; and the proliferation of sleep-aid marketing in the wellness <strong>[End Page 133]</strong> industry. Ma challenges the prevailing tendency to posit sleep as a universal condition, found in texts as divergent as Jonathan Crary’s <em>24/7</em> and Arianna Huffington’s <em>The Sleep Revolution</em>. She points to how the uneven distribution of power across race and gender determines “whose sleep must be protected and who must stay awake in order that others may rest” and views the history of modern sleeplessness as intertwined with that of racial capitalism, beginning not in the factory and coffeehouse but the plantation and colony (34–35). Ma’s own inquiry aims at a more nuanced view of sleep—as historically contingent and permeable with, rather than cloistered from, waking life. In the process, Ma’s book offers a good primer on the history of moving-image spectatorship; a methodological model for writing fluidly across film and visual art, world cinema and media archaeology; and an example of how to use non-Western moving-image practices to interrogate the premises of Western film and media theory.</p> <p>The first section of the book traces a history of sleep and sleepers on screen, while the second ruminates on sleep and spectatorship. Individual chapters overlap and sometimes circle back on one another, a structure that mirrors the porosity and circuity of sleep itself. They cover significant historical and conceptual ground, including the early cinema of Georges Méliès, the photographs of Weegee, Freud’s regressive thesis of sleep, and notions of narcotic reception by Siegfried Kracauer, Jean-Louis Baudry, Christian Metz, and other influential figures of Western film theory. Threaded through are close readings of works by Apichatpong and others that unhinge familiar accounts of sleep and cinema, creating openings for Ma to complicate established ideas—e.g., the analogy between films and dreams, the sedative effects of filmgoing—and shift the terms of debate beyond entrenched binaries of active versus passive, concentration versus distraction.</p> <p>Indeed, it is in its close readings that Ma’s book shines, taking us deep into the wayward itineraries of moving-image works and spectatorial experiences with a sustained sensitivity to how they can open up new conceptual horizons. Tracing the spiral of dream...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"At The Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators by Jean Ma (review)\",\"authors\":\"Xueli Wang\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/tj.2024.a929538\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>At The Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators</em> by Jean Ma <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Xueli Wang </li> </ul> <em>AT THE EDGES OF SLEEP: MOVING IMAGES AND SOMNOLENT SPECTATORS</em>. By Jean Ma. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022; pp. 209. <p>Watching a film together is a ritual of intimacy, especially if we fall asleep. In her book <em>At the Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators</em>, Jean Ma takes the familiar act of sleeping at the movies as an entry point into a wide-ranging exploration of attention, sociality, and embodiment in moving-image culture from the early twentieth century to the present. Tying this ambitious study together is the Thai artist-filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul, whose distinctly soporific œuvre Ma returns to throughout the book as a touchstone for rethinking longstanding theories of the somnolent spectator and for engaging with related works according to an alternative, sleep-woven logic. At stake in this reconceptualization is a fresh receptivity to the kinds of relations sleep can open up: between individuals, past and present, humans and nonhumans, the living and the dead. Whether in the spiritual “possession, transmutation, and reincarnation” that occupy Apichatpong’s visions of sleep (56), or the staging of collective slumber as a ritual of healing in the art installation <em>Black Womxn Dreaming/Divine the Darkness</em> (2019), Ma reads sleep as a social and relational process through which borders soften and energies circulate between self and others. “To sleep in the presence of others is to willingly abandon the fiction of self-sufficiency and autonomy,” Ma writes, “in acknowledgment of vulnerability and interdependence” (36).</p> <p>At the outset, Ma situates her project within a recent “turn to sleep” in critical and popular discourse, in which “[t]he traditionally suspicious view of sleep—as a thief of time, an obstacle to progress . . . gives way to an attitude of solicitousness and respect” (10). This encompasses the emergence of overnight installations in contemporary art; the rise of “critical sleep studies” in academia; and the proliferation of sleep-aid marketing in the wellness <strong>[End Page 133]</strong> industry. Ma challenges the prevailing tendency to posit sleep as a universal condition, found in texts as divergent as Jonathan Crary’s <em>24/7</em> and Arianna Huffington’s <em>The Sleep Revolution</em>. She points to how the uneven distribution of power across race and gender determines “whose sleep must be protected and who must stay awake in order that others may rest” and views the history of modern sleeplessness as intertwined with that of racial capitalism, beginning not in the factory and coffeehouse but the plantation and colony (34–35). Ma’s own inquiry aims at a more nuanced view of sleep—as historically contingent and permeable with, rather than cloistered from, waking life. In the process, Ma’s book offers a good primer on the history of moving-image spectatorship; a methodological model for writing fluidly across film and visual art, world cinema and media archaeology; and an example of how to use non-Western moving-image practices to interrogate the premises of Western film and media theory.</p> <p>The first section of the book traces a history of sleep and sleepers on screen, while the second ruminates on sleep and spectatorship. Individual chapters overlap and sometimes circle back on one another, a structure that mirrors the porosity and circuity of sleep itself. They cover significant historical and conceptual ground, including the early cinema of Georges Méliès, the photographs of Weegee, Freud’s regressive thesis of sleep, and notions of narcotic reception by Siegfried Kracauer, Jean-Louis Baudry, Christian Metz, and other influential figures of Western film theory. Threaded through are close readings of works by Apichatpong and others that unhinge familiar accounts of sleep and cinema, creating openings for Ma to complicate established ideas—e.g., the analogy between films and dreams, the sedative effects of filmgoing—and shift the terms of debate beyond entrenched binaries of active versus passive, concentration versus distraction.</p> <p>Indeed, it is in its close readings that Ma’s book shines, taking us deep into the wayward itineraries of moving-image works and spectatorial experiences with a sustained sensitivity to how they can open up new conceptual horizons. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 在睡眠的边缘:在睡眠的边缘:移动的图像与沉睡的旁观者》,作者:Jean Ma 王学丽。马瑾著。奥克兰:奥克兰:加州大学出版社,2022 年;第 209 页。一起看电影是一种亲密的仪式,尤其是当我们睡着的时候。在她的著作《在睡眠的边缘》(At the Edges of Sleep:一书中,Jean Ma 以人们熟悉的看电影时睡觉这一行为为切入点,对 20 世纪初至今的电影文化中的注意力、社会性和体现进行了广泛的探讨。泰国艺术家兼电影制作人阿彼察邦-韦拉斯哈古(Apichatpong Weerasethakul)的作品将这一雄心勃勃的研究联系在一起,马氏在全书中多次提到他那令人昏昏欲睡的作品,并以此为试金石,重新思考长期以来关于昏睡观众的理论,并根据另一种睡眠编织的逻辑来理解相关作品。这种概念重构的关键在于对睡眠所能开启的各种关系的全新接受:个人之间、过去与现在之间、人类与非人类之间、生者与死者之间的关系。无论是阿彼察邦对睡眠的灵性 "附身、嬗变和转世"(56),还是艺术装置《黑衣女梦/黑暗中的神灵》(2019)中作为治愈仪式的集体沉睡,马氏都将睡眠解读为一种社会和关系过程,通过这一过程,边界得以软化,能量在自我与他人之间循环。马氏写道:"在他人面前入睡,就是心甘情愿地放弃自足和自主的虚构,""承认脆弱和相互依存"(36)。一开始,Ma 就将自己的项目置于近期批评界和流行言论 "转向睡眠 "的背景下,在这一背景下,"传统上对睡眠的怀疑--将其视为时间的小偷、进步的障碍......让位于一种关爱和尊重的态度"(10)。这包括当代艺术中出现的通宵装置;学术界兴起的 "批判性睡眠研究";以及保健 [完 133 页] 行业中睡眠辅助营销的扩散。乔纳森-克拉里(Jonathan Crary)的《24/7》和阿丽安娜-赫芬顿(Arianna Huffington)的《睡眠革命》(The Sleep Revolution)等不同著作都将睡眠视为一种普遍状况,马女士对这种普遍倾向提出了质疑。她指出,不同种族和性别的权力分配不均如何决定了 "谁的睡眠必须得到保护,谁必须保持清醒才能让其他人休息",并认为现代失眠的历史与种族资本主义的历史交织在一起,不是从工厂和咖啡馆开始,而是从种植园和殖民地开始(34-35)。马氏的研究旨在从更细微的角度看待睡眠--睡眠在历史上是偶然的,与清醒的生活相互渗透,而非隔绝。在这一过程中,马氏的著作为我们提供了一本关于活动影像观赏史的入门读物;一个在电影与视觉艺术、世界电影与媒体考古学之间进行流畅写作的方法论模型;以及一个如何利用非西方活动影像实践来拷问西方电影与媒体理论前提的范例。本书第一部分追溯了银幕上睡眠和睡眠者的历史,第二部分则对睡眠和观众身份进行了反思。各个章节相互重叠,有时又相互回环,这种结构反映了睡眠本身的多孔性和循环性。这些章节涵盖了重要的历史和概念领域,包括乔治-梅里爱(Georges Méliès)的早期电影、维吉(Weegee)的摄影作品、弗洛伊德关于睡眠的倒退理论,以及西格弗里德-克拉考尔(Siegfried Kracauer)、让-路易-鲍德里(Jean-Louis Baudry)、克里斯蒂安-梅兹(Christian Metz)和其他西方电影理论界有影响力的人物关于麻醉接收的概念。书中穿插了对阿彼察邦等人作品的细读,这些细读打破了人们对睡眠和电影的固有认识,为马氏创造了机会,使既有观点复杂化--例如,电影与梦境的类比、电影的镇静作用--并使辩论的范围超越了根深蒂固的主动与被动、专注与分心的二元对立。事实上,马英九的这本书正是在其细读中大放异彩,它以持续的敏感性带我们深入移动影像作品和观影体验的歧途,了解它们如何打开新的概念视野。追溯梦境的螺旋式上升......
At The Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators by Jean Ma (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
At The Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators by Jean Ma
Xueli Wang
AT THE EDGES OF SLEEP: MOVING IMAGES AND SOMNOLENT SPECTATORS. By Jean Ma. Oakland: University of California Press, 2022; pp. 209.
Watching a film together is a ritual of intimacy, especially if we fall asleep. In her book At the Edges of Sleep: Moving Images and Somnolent Spectators, Jean Ma takes the familiar act of sleeping at the movies as an entry point into a wide-ranging exploration of attention, sociality, and embodiment in moving-image culture from the early twentieth century to the present. Tying this ambitious study together is the Thai artist-filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul, whose distinctly soporific œuvre Ma returns to throughout the book as a touchstone for rethinking longstanding theories of the somnolent spectator and for engaging with related works according to an alternative, sleep-woven logic. At stake in this reconceptualization is a fresh receptivity to the kinds of relations sleep can open up: between individuals, past and present, humans and nonhumans, the living and the dead. Whether in the spiritual “possession, transmutation, and reincarnation” that occupy Apichatpong’s visions of sleep (56), or the staging of collective slumber as a ritual of healing in the art installation Black Womxn Dreaming/Divine the Darkness (2019), Ma reads sleep as a social and relational process through which borders soften and energies circulate between self and others. “To sleep in the presence of others is to willingly abandon the fiction of self-sufficiency and autonomy,” Ma writes, “in acknowledgment of vulnerability and interdependence” (36).
At the outset, Ma situates her project within a recent “turn to sleep” in critical and popular discourse, in which “[t]he traditionally suspicious view of sleep—as a thief of time, an obstacle to progress . . . gives way to an attitude of solicitousness and respect” (10). This encompasses the emergence of overnight installations in contemporary art; the rise of “critical sleep studies” in academia; and the proliferation of sleep-aid marketing in the wellness [End Page 133] industry. Ma challenges the prevailing tendency to posit sleep as a universal condition, found in texts as divergent as Jonathan Crary’s 24/7 and Arianna Huffington’s The Sleep Revolution. She points to how the uneven distribution of power across race and gender determines “whose sleep must be protected and who must stay awake in order that others may rest” and views the history of modern sleeplessness as intertwined with that of racial capitalism, beginning not in the factory and coffeehouse but the plantation and colony (34–35). Ma’s own inquiry aims at a more nuanced view of sleep—as historically contingent and permeable with, rather than cloistered from, waking life. In the process, Ma’s book offers a good primer on the history of moving-image spectatorship; a methodological model for writing fluidly across film and visual art, world cinema and media archaeology; and an example of how to use non-Western moving-image practices to interrogate the premises of Western film and media theory.
The first section of the book traces a history of sleep and sleepers on screen, while the second ruminates on sleep and spectatorship. Individual chapters overlap and sometimes circle back on one another, a structure that mirrors the porosity and circuity of sleep itself. They cover significant historical and conceptual ground, including the early cinema of Georges Méliès, the photographs of Weegee, Freud’s regressive thesis of sleep, and notions of narcotic reception by Siegfried Kracauer, Jean-Louis Baudry, Christian Metz, and other influential figures of Western film theory. Threaded through are close readings of works by Apichatpong and others that unhinge familiar accounts of sleep and cinema, creating openings for Ma to complicate established ideas—e.g., the analogy between films and dreams, the sedative effects of filmgoing—and shift the terms of debate beyond entrenched binaries of active versus passive, concentration versus distraction.
Indeed, it is in its close readings that Ma’s book shines, taking us deep into the wayward itineraries of moving-image works and spectatorial experiences with a sustained sensitivity to how they can open up new conceptual horizons. Tracing the spiral of dream...
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For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.