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Living Dead Frogs & Acrobatic Flies: Survivances from the Past in the First Scientific Films

Authors :
Maria Ida Bernabei
Source :
Cinergie, Iss 19, Pp 171-189 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
University of Bologna, 2021.

Abstract

Crossing centuries Lives in a drop of water, Anguillulae Aceti and Fresh-water Hydras; living dead frogs, ten feet tall fleas and well-trained flies; bow-tied chemists, barker-like scientists and Scientia… a whole popular science series that borrows the name from a luna park stand. In aiming at the objective visualization of a pure phenomenon, scientific film is supposed to be free from any history, any tradition, any (linguistic) heritage, any intertextuality. It is surprising to find out that it is not always true. By the “instructive amusement” imperative which first popular science series borrowed from Positivism, it seems then to get the grips with some survivances of dusty fairground stands, of maravigliosi optical games, of evolving cabinets de physique. Can scientific film show how cinema has remediated its ancestors? Can it teach us something about the unsuspected love of the 1920s avant-garde for the past, about their “dialectical” tension?

Details

Language :
English, Italian
ISSN :
22809481
Issue :
19
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cinergie
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.06e96c861349a7afdf8cfcf323e1d2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2280-9481/12304