Cinema in Spite of Itself-But Cinema All The Same: T.W. Adorno
Cinema in Spite of Itself-But Cinema All The Same: T.W. Adorno
adorno
cinema in spite of
itselfbut cinema
all the same
NICOLE BRENEZ
Few theorists have been as critical of cinema as T.W. Adorno. Critical in this context implies
all of the following: methodical, negative and subtle. The Frankfurt School took as its object
of critique the processes whereby phenomena become reified; in the symbolic field the school
concentrated therefore on the workings of industrialisation and the transformation of culture
into a system of regimentation.2 T.W. Adorno developed a basic critique of two of the cultural
fields that entail recording: music and cinema. For him, cinema and popular or popularised
music (music recorded, broadcast, its forms contaminated by their use as social wallpaper,
music in short viewed as an emanation pure and simple of the world of industry) were
emblematic of how works of art had become commodified cultural products. A cultural
commodity represents simultaneously the means of a confiscation, a mode of corruption,
a simulacrum, and a sort of formal joke. Music, though, lays claim of course to its own
immense past, as well as to the demands it was contemporaneously making (demands
embodied in the person of Schnberg). As a consequence it continues to exist as an art even
in its lighter form. But cinema, which arose out of techniques of recording and whose primary
goal is reproduction organised into an industry, appears from the start as a powerful instrument of domination, propaganda and falsification. Adornos achievement consists in his
having furnished us with instruments for understanding ideology as much as for defining
the concept of art.
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In 1934, Adorno spent a day visiting the Neubabelsberg studios, and in 1936 described
the experience in a letter to Walter Benjamin: reality is always constructed with an infantile
attachment to the mimetic and then photographed .3 In 1944, now an exile in Santa Monica,
he wrote, with Hanns Eisler, a book on cinema music that draws heavily on statements taken
from texts by Eisenstein and examples deriving from the films of Victor Trivas, Joris Ivens,
John Ford, Joseph Losey, etc. In Hollywood he met a number of film-makers, notably Charlie
Chaplin, Billy Wilder and Fritz Lang, for whom, along with Bertolt Brecht and Hanns Eisler,
he was looking for ideas/materials/concepts, as the film maker Alexander Kluge puts it. 4
Kluge, with whom he was to rewrite Composing for the Films, was his student. Adorno himself devoted a number of articles to cinema: Prophesied by Kierkegaard, In Malibu and
Transparencies on Film.5 Most importantly, Adorno frequently refers to cinema, both implicitly,
as is the case when another discipline, such as erudite music, his preferred field of analysis,
has his attention, and also explicitly. Taken together, his remarks amount to the most pitiless
indictment ever drawn up against cinema, the central sector of the culture industry.6
Adorno did go to the movies. In his letters and articles, you can feel how pained he was
by the lack of formal consistency, the emotional blackmail and the behaviorservile, travestied
or infamouslauded in industry films.7 His friend and co-writer Max Horkheimer described
the profound feeling of melancholy that grips a spectator watching even a decent movie.8
From Henry Porten to Clark Gable,9 the movie star, as the iconic instance of the transformation
of a human being into a commodity, is viewed by Adorno as the final stage in a process of
liquidation: the liquidation of expressivity, singularity and individuationthis last being a
fundamental concept of Critical Theory, for which it is a touchstone of emancipation, freedom
and justice.
Better Greta Garbo than Mickey Rooney, but better King Kong than Greta Garbo:10 Adorno
spontaneously reverses the hierarchical ordering of popular films and films with artistic pretensions, A movies and B movies. Thus he writes to Benjamin of Max Reinhardts and William
Dieterles A Midsummer Nights Dream, that the films ambitions to attain the auratic dimension itself lead inevitably to the destruction of the aura. Rather like the cinematographic
Manet served up to us in Anna Karenina.11 One must possess nerves of steel to be able to
endure this kind of liquidation.12 (Incidentally, the Reinhardt film is a historical relay-station
in that it provided the matrix out of which Kenneth Angers film-making emerged. In it, Anger
performed his first role as a child; and throughout his career he attempted to take up and
develop the issue of aura, under the term magick). Conversely, the critical power of the
music-hall trained comics or burlesque comedians, from Chaplin to the Marx Brothers, did
not escape Adorno any more than it did Antonin Artaud. More generally, and this unheeded
hypothesis seems not to have lost its force, any film, even the poorest motion pictures, can
show occasional flashes that hint at the possibility of art.13
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Among other topics, Adorno suggested to Benjamin that he give the Institute for Social
Research an essay on film in the narrower sense, meaning thereby with reference to a corpus
of films as opposed to cinema understood globally as an industrial apparatus.14 This invitation
to Benjamin allows us a rare glimpse of a programmatic willingness on Adornos part to allow
for difference between individual films (as industrial commodities) and cinema (as a means
of production), as if for a brief moment he was empathising with his friends position on the
matter. In his turn Benjamin, an exemplary cinephile who one day urged Adorno to see the
memorable Old Dark House,15 eventually subscribed to his correspondents negative positions,
when the talkies came in and began to spread. It becomes steadily clearer to me that the
launching of sound film must be considered an action on the part of the industry to crush
the revolutionary primacy of silent film, which more readily produced reactions that were
difficult to control and politically dangerous. An analysis of sound film would provide a
critique of contemporary art that would dialectically mediate your viewpoint and mine.16
Not content to critique the culture industry in its most common productsa laundry list
would include the stars, the films of Walt Disney, Zanuck, Mrs Miniver Adorno deliberately
goes after the best of them: for different reasons a Frank Capra scene or Orson Welless media
status are adduced as samples of the way the publicity machine goes about the process of
corruption and reification. Discussing images of the professor in the public domain, he
describes Sternbergs The Blue Angel by contrast with Heinrich Manns original novel, as its
kitsch film version.17 In view of his argument concerning touch as what transforms style
into a trademark and an advertising device, Ernst Lubitsch is not spared, even though The
Shop Around the Corner is an apposite filmic illustration of Adornos own argument concerning
the way capitalism makes man and his economic destiny virtually interchangeable. A crucial
point in his analyses relates to the way the culture industry makes use of legendary criminals
and asocial personalities in order to eradicate tendencies to revolt and to empty the tragic
of all meaning. It makes sense that, always supposing they had read them, the proponents
of Auteur politics in France failed to see the point of Adornos theses, in which he viewed
auteur films as a democratic alibi (liberal deviations, he wrote) for an industry tailored to
meet the needs of capitalist social administration.
Nevertheless, like many artists and theorists of the time, Adorno accords Chaplin a sort
of extraterritorial status. The film Adorno returns to most frequently as an emblem of failure
is The Great Dictator:18 he highlights different instances of and different causes for the satires
ineffectiveness. When he assigns the wheatfields swaying in the wind at the end of Chaplins
film19 to Aryan imagery, this is no arbitrary judgment based on taste or extremist eccentricity;
Adornos comments are grounded in his reflections on Auschwitz and are those of a viewer
who watches the film in the perspective of Nazisms victims, and cannot entertain the compensatory imagery that runs through it (in particular the sequence in which the heroine strikes
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the Nazi soldier and escapes). Adorno once described his own concrete existence in the
following terms: [b]y way of atonement he will be plagued by dreams such as that he is no
longer living at all, that he was sent to the ovens in 1944 and his whole existence since has
been imaginary, an emanation of the insane wish of a man killed twenty years earlier.20 So
his fierce criticisms of The Great Dictator, which can seem so unjust toward one of the rare
works in which cinema one day showed itself capable of meeting the imperatives of history,
in fact restore to the film the desperate urgency that authorised Chaplin to create it. We need
to try to imagine the situation: a man suffering from survivor guilt watching Chaplins The
Great Dictator. How could it not intensify his suffering, as a return of the trauma, a reminder
of the insufficiency of the symbolic, as well as an altogether too horrible demand made on
the human spirit? The violence of Adornos remarks on The Great Dictator is in proportion
to such demands. The inevitable faltering of writing in the face of horror was the subject of
very clear methodological commentary in the preamble to his article Education After
Auschwitz (a lecture given in 1966 and published the following year):
The author was unable to revise the essay on Auschwitz and had to content himself with
removing the crudest deficiencies of expression. Where the text speaks of the most extreme
things, of harrowing death, the form arouses shame, as though it were sinning against the
suffering by unavoidably reducing it to so much available material.21
The need to think through the conditions that made Auschwitz possible, the degradation of
the human that transformed men and women into anonymous things to be destroyed or
industrialised at will, is what determines Adornos project, which consists of sheeting home
the nature, role and functions of thought, knowledge, rationality, social organization and
within the latter the culture industry, to processes of subjection and fake individuation. The
exceptional importance of Chaplins work for Adorno can be perceived further in his analyses
of the actors comic invention, in which by contrast he sees the working out of a model of
freedom (a utopia, in the sense he gives that word). Chaplins status is confirmed even more
clearly, perhaps, when here and there in the course of other articles he mentions Modern
Times or Monsieur Verdoux.22 in the same breath as texts by Karl Kraus or plays by Beckett,
his favorite references. The fact that one can think with certain films, and not simply about
them, is the irrefutable sign of their value. Adorno points also to the existential role played
by the figure of Chaplin in the thought of his friend Kracauer.
One would have to go back over the dialogues that took place between Adorno and those
of his interlocutors who did not reject cinema in itself but only the uses to which it is put.
Certain of these, like Walter Benjamin or Bertolt Brecht, thought it might be used for
revolutionary purposes; others, such as Gyrgy Lukcs or Siegfried Kracauer, started from
the same political analysis but developed very different theories. Parallels should also be
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drawn between Adornos thinking and that of the great theorists who were his contemporaries,
in particular Jean Epstein who a priori might appear to be assignable to an area of speculative
thought incompatible with Adorno in that it is inspired by models other than those of the
rational. Yet Epstein, starting from exactly opposite postulates (the cinema as a fresh new
revelation of the world), arrives by way of conclusion at the same premises as Adorno (the
cinema as a confiscation of the imaginary), while Adornos thought in its last form is in agreement with Epsteins initial postulates (the existence of cinema redefines the very field of art).
Guy Debords thinking about spectacle is informed by Adornos thought. Debords Society
of the Spectacle (the book and the film) is something like a belated jacket-blurb for the Dialectic
of Enlightenment, and Adornos Aesthetic Theory was to discuss the project of perpetual
transcendence of art that was then being given its latest rendition by Situationism. Texts
by Rainer Werner Fassbinder or Pier Paolo Pasolini yield a crop of statements taken from
Adorno, in particular with respect to the principle of non self-preservation that had emerged
from Adornos and Horkheimers work on Max Weber. Toward the end of Negative Dialectics,
when Adorno is discussing what remains of metaphysics following Auschwitz, there is something like a synopsis of Porcile: The man who managed to recall what used to strike him in
the words dung hill and pig sty might be closer to absolute knowledge than Hegels chapter
in which readers are promised such knowledge only to have it withheld with a superior
mien.23 Youssef Ishaghpour has shown how certain films by Jean-Marie Straub and Danile
Huillet resonate with some of Adornos analyses, or with his studies on Schnberg in Philosophy
of Modern Music and Quasi una fantasia; and the same could be said of Bach defended against
his Devotees in Prisms,24 for example. Conversely, a maxim of Jean-Marie Straubs: cinema
will only begin when the film industry is dead,25 might serve as a point of entry into Adornos
thought. One of Adornos most unexpected and attractive statements, which arises at the
very heart of a passage concerning Schnberg, asserts precisely that the very possibility of
film (by implication: film as art) is simultaneously sabotaged by the industrial conditions
of its production and safeguarded by avant-garde painting and music.26
In 1995, the quintessentially Benjaminian Jean-Luc Godard was awarded the Adorno Prize
and for the occasion wrote the gloomiest of all his pronouncements.27 Godards concept of
the screen-image, which he developed in his Dziga-Vertov perioda screen image is one
that is made as a cover for the image one does not makehad been developed by Horkheimer
as early as 1926.
Today, the massacres of St. Bartholomew that imperialism stages, or the heroic courage of
the person that resists them, have become daily events which are reported as miscellaneous
items in the press. [] Of course, there are people who shed tears over Sunny Boy at the
movies. And they do that at the very moment that, in the service of their own interests, real
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persons are slowly being tortured to death, simply because they were suspected of fighting
for the liberation of mankind. Photography, telegraphy and the radio have shrunk the faraway into the close-to. The populations of the cities witness the misery of the entire earth.
One would think that this might prompt them to demand its abolition. But simultaneously,
what is close-to become the far-away. Now, the horror of ones city is submerged in the general
suffering, and people turn their attention to the marital problems of movie stars. In every
respect, the past is being beaten up by the present.28
For Adorno and Horkheimer, cinema belongs to an overall apparatus of control: alongside, and in the same way as, the institutions of politics, education, religion and art (in which
are included philosophy and the humanities), it functions as a way of concealing the obvious
fact that the West possesses the necessary resources to put an end to poverty and injustice,
but uses them instead to spread repression and terror. Adornos philosophy represses all signs
of emotional self-indulgence, but as in the case of Diogenes or Marx, it is written from beginning to end from the point of view of concrete pain and suffering, that of the beggar whose
house has been burned to the ground, that for which the name Auschwitz stands, that of
economic victims wherever they survive, and that of a lost dog on its way to the pound.29
Adornos intellectual pathway concerning cinema will be traced here through a selected
anthology of quotations which is intended to give an idea of the radicalness of his critique
and the complexity of his thought, which is often reductively boiled down to an attitude
of unequivocal and systematic opposition. Of jazz it is true that he had nothing good to say,
acknowledging the aesthetic greatness of certain musicians without seeing in it any reason
to modify his understanding of jazz itself as a form of music engendered by the world of
industry.30 Absolutely nothing of television was worth saving, witness the essays written
between 1952 and 1954, Prologue to Television, Television as Ideology,31 and How to
Look at Television.32 By contrast, his absolute rejection of cinema as a part of the culture
industry, a rejection that leads him to refuse any kind of auteur initiative and derives
its value from its very intransigence, did not prevent him from seeing cinema as a field of
possibilities both practical and theoretical.
On the practical plane, Alexander Kluge tells us he owes his career as a filmmaker to
Adorno. My teacher Adorno, whose lectures I was following at the Frankfurt School, was
given to saying that after Proust literature no longer existed. In order to divert me from
writing, he introduced me into Fritz Langs group in 1958 and I became his assistant on The
Indian Tomb [Das Indische Grabmal]. 33 On the theoretical plane, Adornos articles show
that when cinema was not being confronted head-on as a model of mass confiscation, it was
a landmark reference for Adorno, and useful for purposes of comparison. For example,
cinema comes up three times in the course of Notes on Kafka in support of a speculation
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76
Marcel Hanouns or Christian Boltanskis minimalist and political experiments had he discovered them. Second, cinema turns out to be capable of objectifying the discontinuous
functioning of images in the psyche. In Transparencies on Film there is a proposition that
brings together the Proustian iconography of memorythe magic lantern passage in
Combraywith Einsteins celebrated idea that the cinemas vocation is to make manifest the
complex, discontinuous and stratified workings of the human psyche, beginning with the
stream of consciousness. (Whence Thomas Y. Levins skillful translation of the title Filmtransparente, in which transparencies signifies both effects of transparency and photographic
slides.)40 These potentialities of film, which appear divergent and were never synthesised
by Adorno, do come together, or at least many of them do, in that they are comparable with
the same thing: writing. Not writing as a system of signs, but writing as a physical action
performed by the hand and the eyesthat is, Adornos own main occupation.
Carried out as they were from the 1940s on an audiovisual industry still emerging, Adornos
analyses have turned out to have been highly predictive: point for point what they describe
is our own present-day symbolic and material environment. Television points the way to a
development which easily enough could push the Warner brothers into the doubtless
unwelcome position of little theatre performers and cultural conservatives, he wrote as early
as 1944.41 And so it is that today Ernst Lubitsch and Orson Welles have become beloved
classics, Andy Warhols multiples are considered the very acme of artistic pertinence and
cinema has been marginalised upward in the image industry, where it now has the same
standing as electronics research in the defense industry or fashion design in the textile industry.
The dictatorship of the culture industry, as Adorno did not hesitate to call it,42 has so well
absorbed the phenomenon whereby each generation makes a fetish of what it was exposed
to in childhood that the subculture of any given era, however much of a travesty it may be,
comes to represent nirvana for the following generation. And Adornos analyses are still
predictive: the apparatus described in The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception was just the journeyman stage of means of social control that are now developing faster
and faster.
In a society of large-scale fascistic rackets which agree among themselves on how much of
the national product is to be allocated to providing for the needs of the people, to invite the
people to use a particular soap powder would, in the end, seem anachronistic. In a more
modern, less ceremonious style, the Fhrer directly orders both the holocaust and the supply
of trash.43
(Recall that this essay begins on the thesis that Film, radio, and magazines form a system.44
There is no real difference between cinema and advertising, only an illusory hierarchy created
by the apparatus of power.) Outside of Hans Haacke, Abel Ferrara or Paul Verhoeven, it is
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still rare to find systems of thought that dare, as Adorno and Horkheimer did, to describe
Nazism as capitalisms preferred transcription of itself into politics and the goal toward which
it naturally tends to develop, hampered only by the regrettable propensity for survival displayed by the peoples of the world. And finally, in proportion to the demands his critique
makes on us, Adornos analyses provide us with anthropological evidence of aesthetic ideals
and ethical exigencies that today are as much swallowed into oblivion as the city of Atlantis,
that being their most operative dimension. Whatever he himself says of it, Adornos understanding of art is in the German idealist tradition that sees it as a manifestation of the absolute
and of truth (albeit in forms quite different, of course, from those propounded by Moritz
and Schiller). But Adorno immediately deduces from that understanding concrete and practical obligations that are many times more radical than the gentle invitations to morality
described by Kant and Schiller. This ethical imperative is summed up in a note of
Horkheimers: Art is identical with truth, and truth forces us to adopt the only true praxis,
which is to carry on the endless unequal struggle on behalf of the human creature.45
The purpose of our too brief anthology is to provide an introduction to a fundamental
theory that has been insufficiently taken account of in France, except by Youssef Ishagpours
pioneering writing, in particular in Dune image lautre46 or Visconti, le sens et limage47.48
Among the French analysts who do not refer to Adorno but are spontaneously closest to him
are, for example, Edgar Morin, Paul Virilio, Christian Pociello, Jean-Michel Valantinall
four writing in different disciplinary areas. In The Stars,49 Edgar Morin studies one of the
epiphenomena of the capitalist fetishisation of human appearance in the way that, one
year earlier, Adorno had studied the mythification of social relations in astrology columns.50
In War and Cinema: the Logic of Perception,51 Paul Virilio studies how the articulations that
connect cinematic techniques and military technology are constantly renewed. In La science
en mouvements. Etienne Marey et Georges Demen,52 Christian Pociello documents the financial,
technical and ideological beginnings of scientific cinema in the context of a rationalisation
of the disciplines of the body. In Hollywood, le Pentagone et Washington,53 Jean-Michel Valantin
outlines the practical workings of so-called national security cinema. One of the greatest
missed opportunities in France was the failed encounter between the Frankfurt School
and Michel Foucault, regretted by the latter.54 Important initiatives are emerging at the level
of both method and theory.
Like all philosophies of cinema, Adornos in our opinion is open to criticism from the
point of view of the films themselves, including, radically enough, those that are products
of the culture industry. The point of such a confrontation would not be to invalidate, confirm
or enrich the theory, but to grasp the degree to which films can or cannot be as lavishly fruitful as the ideas that arise from themideas that are as definitional of cinema as the films. In
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Adornos thought there is an armamentarium of principles, outcomes and problems that has
uncommon beauty. Few theorists have been as critical of cinema as Adorno. Critical in this
context implies all of the following: dialectical, bracing and redemptive.
One last phenomenon should be stressed. Adornos writing, which is sometimes fragmentary, as in Minima Moralia, but is most often organised by a logistics of argument that
is as inexorable as the thunderclap that precedes a flash of lightning, loses a great deal
from the difficult process of extraction made necessary by quoting it. To quote from it
contributes to converting the work produced by its logical energyand hence its most active
ingredientinto a slogan. Violent and beneficial as thought so reduced might appear, it has
nevertheless been simplified; its spirit, letter, nature and function have been betrayed.
That we provide subheads only makes the crime more heinous.
Against aura and the educational function of cinema
[I]f anything can be said to possess an auratic character now, it is precisely the film which
does so, and to an extreme and highly suspect degree. To make one small additional point:
the idea that a reactionary individual can be transformed into a member of the avantgarde through an intimate acquaintance with the films of Chaplin, strikes me as simple
romanticization. [] After all, it is hardly an accident if that modern art [cinema], which
you counterpose as auratic in character to technological art, is of such inherently dubious
quality as Vlaminck and Rilke. It is certainly an easy matter for the lower sphere to score a
victory over art like that; but if we were to mention the names of Kafka, say, or Schnberg
in this connection instead, then the problem would look rather different. Schnbergs music
is emphatically not auratic.55
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80
Expressivity confiscated
That is the secret of the keep smiling attitude. The fact becomes a dead letter by freezing
the most living thing about it, namely its laughter. The film fulfils the old Childrens threat
of the ugly grimace which freezes when wind changes or the clock strikes. And here it strikes
the hour of total domination. The masks of the film are so many emblems of authority. Their
horror grows to the extent that these masks are able to move and speak, although this
does nothing to alter their inexorability: everything that lives is captured in such masks. As
far as mass culture is concerned reification is no metaphor.63
81
82
83
84
seriousness, without batting an eyelash; and recently, in his Theory of Film, he narrates such
atrocities as the visible genesis of a piece of music in the composer, the hero, as though something like the technical rationality of the medium were at work in them.80 The commercial
film Kracauer attacked profited inadvertently from his tolerance; at times the latter reaches
its limit at the intolerantthe experimental film.81
85
even in its rebellion against art, and widens arts range. This contradiction, which film in any
case cannot settle given its dependency on profit, is the vital element in every authentically
modern art. It may be that the phenomenon whereby the different arts overstep one anothers
borders secretly stems from the same contradictory impulse.86
My warm thanks to Edward Dimendberg, Alexander Kluge, Thomas Y. Levin, Pierre Rusch
and Beata Wiggen
NICOLE BRENEZ
books include Shadows (Nathan, 1995), De la figure en gnral et du corps en particulier (De Boeck,
1998) and Abel Ferrara (Illinois University Press, 2007). She is the curator of avant-garde film for
the Cinmathque franaise. Her essays appear regularly in the journals Rouge, Trafic and Panic.
Originally published in Trafic, no. 50, Summer, 2004, pp. 27894. Reprinted with permission.
1. Adorno, 1952.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
86
7.
8.
9.
10.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
Garbo.
Letter of 28 May 1936.
Composing for the Films, p. xi.
Letter of 2 July 1937.
Directed by James Whale, 1932, starring Boris
Karloff.
Letter to Adorno 9 December 1938.
[Translators note: Our translation from the
French.]
Taboos on the Teaching Vocation, 1965. Theodor
W. Adorno, Critical Models: Interventions and
Catchwords, trans. Henry Pickford, Columbia
University Press, New York, 1998, p. 184.
Negative Dialectics 1944, Composing for the Films;
Commitment 1962. Theodor Adorno, Negative
Dialectics, trans. E.B. Ashton, Continuum,
New York, 1990, pp. 16162; Composing for the
films, pp. 12526 and Theodor Adorno, Notes to
Literature, vol. 2, Rolf Tiedemann (ed), trans.
Shierry Weber Nicholsen, Columbia University
Press, New York, 1992, p. 76.
Translators note: our translation, the citation is
on page 119 of the English edition of Dialectic of
Enlightenment.
Negative Dialectics, p. 363.
Critical Models: Interventions and Catchwords,
p. 125.
Notes on Kafka 19421953, The Schema of
Mass Culture. The Culture Industry, p. 94 and
Prisms, p. 243.
Translatorsnote: Negative Dialectics, Seabury
Press, New York, 1973, p. 366.
Youssef Ishagpour, Lirreprsentable et ses signes,
Cinma contemporain de ce ct du miroir, La
Diffrence, Paris, 1986.
Pierre Clmenti, Milos Jancs, Glauber Rocha and
Jean-Marie Straub, Theres Nothing More
International Than a Pack of Pimps, Rouge, no. 3,
2004, <http://www.rouge.com.au/3/index.html>.
Schnberg and Progress, 1941. Theodor Adorno,
Philosophy of Modern Music, trans. Anne Mitchell
and Wesley Blomster, The Seabury Press, New
York, 1973, p. 29.
Jean-Luc Godard, A propos de cinma et
dhistoire, Trafic, no. 18, Spring 1996.
Max Horkheimer, Dawn and Decline: Notes
19261931 and 19501969, trans. Michael Shaw,
The Seabury Press, New York, 1978, p. 19.
[Translators note: Translation modified.]
These instances are taken from Negative Dialectics.
See in particular his letter to Joachim-Ernst
Berendt, Rponse une critique de Mode
intemporelle, in Prismes, 1953. Critique de la
culture et de la socit, Paris, Payot, 1986,
pp. 24347.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
87
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
88
Industry, p. 63.
61. 1942, The Schema of Mass Culture, The Culture
Industry, p. 71.
62. 1942, The Schema of Mass Culture, The Culture
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
Industry, p. 93.
1944, Dialectic of Enlightenment, p. 111.
1944, Dialectic of Enlightenment, p. 112.
1944, Dialectic of Enlightenment, pp. 11516.
1944, Dialectic of Enlightenment, pp. 12223.
1944, Composing for the Films, p. xi.
1944, Composing for the Films, p. 5.
1944, Composing for the Films, pp. 167.
1944, Composing for the Films, p. 36.
1944, Dialectic of Enlightenment, p. 126.
Minima Moralia, 194647, p. 191. (Theodor W.
Adorno, Minima Moralia, trans. E.F.N. Jephcott,
Verso, London, 1994.)
Minima Moralia, p. 204.
194647, Minima Moralia, pp. 20506.
1948, Stravinsky and Restoration, Philosophy of
Modern Music, pp. 18081.
1962, Titles, Notes to Literature, vol. 2, p. 10.
1964, Chaplin in Malibu, cited in Hollywood
Flatlands, p. 179.
1964, The Curious Realist: On Siegfried
Kracauer, Notes to Literature, vol. 2, pp. 623.
In all likeliness, Toute la ville danse by Julien
Duvivier (1938), on Johann Strauss, described by
Kracauer in Theory of Film, p. 151. In our opinion,
in both From Caligari to Hitler and in Theory of
Film, Kracauer in fact showed himself to be an
exemplary historian of avant-garde cinema.
1964, The Curious Realist: On Siegfried
Kracauer, Notes to Literature, vol. 2, p. 66.
Filmtransparente, Ohne Leitbild, p. 82.
[Translators note: We have translated citations
from Ohne Leitbild directly from the German. We
were unable to locate an English translation.]
Filmtransparente, Ohne Leitbild, p. 83.
Antithse: Film pour un performer avec sons
lectroniques et quotidiens, 1965, broadcast on
German television in April 1966 (notes by
Thomas Y. Levin for the American edition).
Filmtransparente, Ohne Leitbild, p. 85.
1967, Die Kunst und die Knste, Ohne Leitbild,
p. 181.