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The Nature of Ostension

    1. [1] University of Reading

      University of Reading

      Reino Unido

  • Localización: Comparative cinema, ISSN-e 2604-9821, Vol. 11, Nº. 20, 2023 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Cinema’s Natures: Comparative Approaches to Ecocinema), págs. 10-25
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Enlaces
  • Resumen
    • The initiating comparison for this essay is between two images, or shots; one appears in Jessica Sarah Rinland’s Black Pond (2018), and shows two people looking offscreen, surrounded by dense woodland; the other is reprinted and described in Bruno Latour’s essay “Circulating Reference” (1999) and shows three scientists near a border between a savanna and a forest, looking and gesturing in different directions. Rinland and Latour share an ethnographic interest in the material and gestural minutiae of scientific engagement with the non-human world. This essay explores their common interest in pointing, and in ostension more generally, as it emerges in both case studies. Latour provides a rich and suggestive framework through which to understand Black Pond, particularly in its conception of natural-history study as a multi-stage process of mediation, made up of tools and gestures and inferences – rather than the momentary encountering or witnessing more familiar to eco-film aesthetics.


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