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Mixing Memory and Desire: Elegiac Consciousness in Two Films by Pedro Almodóva

Posted on:2019-10-10Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Pacifica Graduate InstituteCandidate:Allemand, John XFull Text:PDF
GTID:1475390017991498Subject:Film studies
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation is a depth psychological analysis of the films of Pedro Almodovar, with a particular focus on All About My Mother (1999) and Volver (2006). The writer examines the stylistic, narrative, and thematic ties between these films and suggests that they represent a sustained meditation on the nature of loss, grief, memory, and desire, one whose primary affective and aesthetic tone is elegiac in nature. The study employs a hermeneutic approach grounded in the principles of depth psychology---psychoanalysis, analytic psychology, and the archetypal psychology of James Hillman---to elucidate Almodovar's poesis, or myth-making of mourning. The generativity of image and its relation to desire and memory in the cinema is a pervasive theme in depth psychological approaches to film; the medium lends itself to a kind of nostalgia in which those necessary losses, conscious and unconscious, so central to the development of the self, activate a search for origins, whether intrapsychic, interpersonal, or collective. The films in question were examined as "texts" to be read and interpreted; Almodovar's texts are heavily intertextual in nature. The researcher distinguished between film as text, cinema as "apparatus" (mechanical representation), film theory and criticism as "discourse," and cinema as "institution or ritual." Relevant concepts from related arts disciplines (drama, fiction, visual art) were used to amplify new meanings generated by a depth psychological study of the texts. Keywords: Pedro Almodovar, film, psychoanalysis, Jung, archetypal psychology, grief, mourning, elegy, women, intertextuality, hermeneutic.
Keywords/Search Tags:Film, Pedro, Depth psychological, Memory, Desire
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