@inbook{b73b94b2db5947c1bef8f39d8f7d4e61,
title = "Geoblocking the sun: solar eclipses in transnational artists' film",
abstract = "The basis for works by such filmmakers as James Benning and Kevin Jerome Everson, the “Great American Eclipse” of August 2017 demonstrated the desire of artists{\textquoteright} film to capture the unique phenomenon of totality, when the moon completely obscures the sun for a period of several minutes. Beyond the borders of the United States, the transnational efforts of Lukas Marxt{\textquoteright}s Double Dawn (2014) in Australia and J.P. Sniadecki{\textquoteright}s The Yellow Bank (2010) in China also render the solar eclipse as a phenomenon of great cultural and ecological scope. While the astronomical event in each of these films itself provides a singular and contingent spectacle for the camera, this chapter argues that the eclipse{\textquoteright}s mythical conjugation of the elemental forces of fire and earth also resonates unexpectedly with the diverse environments that fall under the moon{\textquoteright}s shadow.",
author = "Stefan Solomon",
note = "Originally published in Volume 3(1) (2023) of Brill{\textquoteright}s journal Studies in World Cinema: A Critical Journal. DOI: 10.1163/26659891-bja10028",
year = "2025",
doi = "10.1163/9789004735125_013",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789004735118",
series = "Contemporary Cinema",
publisher = "Brill",
pages = "248--268",
editor = "{de Luca}, Tiago and Matilda Mroz",
booktitle = "Elemental world cinema",
address = "Netherlands",
}