Geoblocking the sun: solar eclipses in transnational artists' film

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    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’ 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’s Double Dawn (2014) in Australia and J.P. Sniadecki’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’s mythical conjugation of the elemental forces of fire and earth also resonates unexpectedly with the diverse environments that fall under the moon’s shadow.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationElemental world cinema
    Subtitle of host publicationcinematic entanglements of Earth, Fire, Water and Air
    EditorsTiago de Luca, Matilda Mroz
    Place of PublicationLeiden ; Boston
    PublisherBrill
    Chapter11
    Pages248-268
    Number of pages21
    ISBN (Electronic)9789004735125
    ISBN (Print)9789004735118
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2025

    Publication series

    NameContemporary Cinema
    PublisherBrill
    Volume12
    ISSN (Print)1572-3070

    Bibliographical note

    Originally published in Volume 3(1) (2023) of Brill’s journal Studies in World Cinema: A Critical Journal. DOI: 10.1163/26659891-bja10028

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