Currie - Image and Mind
Currie - Image and Mind
Currie - Image and Mind
L.zbrary
of Congress Cataloging-in-PublkafxonData
Currie Gregory.
Image and mind : film, philosophy and cognitive science | Gregory
Currie.
p.cm.
Indudes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN o521-45356-9 1hardback)
I. Motion pictures - Philosophy. I. Title.
rN1995.C795 1995
791.43 1 - dc2O 95-1357
CIP
A catalog record for this book is available from the British iibrary.
Contents
Preface page xi
Aclmowledgements xxi
Film, 1895-1995 xxiii
Contents
Part II ImaginaHon
Chapter 5 Imagination,the general theory 141
5.1 Perspective shifts 142
5.2 Simulation 144
5.3 Fiction and o ds of simulation 152
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Contents
Contents
In conclus'mn 281
Narned propositions 2 83
Bibliography 2 85
Index
2 97
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Preface
f1ard is his lot, that here by fortune placed,
Must watch the wild vicissitudes of taste,
With every meteor of caprice must play,
And chase the new-blown bubbles of the day.
DrJohnson
Preface
Preface
Prejace
xiv
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Preface
The contrast I see here between Freudian theory and cognitive science is not
accepted by everyone. See, e.g., Clark Glymore "Freuds Androids".
: See, e.g., Kaja Silverman, Subject of Semiotics, p. 202: rite gaze which
directs our look seems to belong to a fictional character rather than to the
camera." See also Jacques Aumont, 'The Point of View", p. z: Th e frame in
narrative cinema is always more or less the representation of a gaze, the
auteur s or the characters.
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Preface
xvi
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Preface
xvii
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Preface
IO
Others see the issue of clarity differently: Vivian Sobchack speaks of the
"sloppy liberal humanism that retrospectively characterized cinema studies
before it was informed by the scientific methods and technically precise vo
cabularies of structuralism and semiotics"; Sobchack, The Address of the Eye,
p. xiv.
11
See also Anne Friedberg s exploration of the relations between cinema and
shopping (" Fldneurs du Mal(I): Gnome and the Postmodern Condition",
pp. 419431)"
12
Gilles Deleuze, Ciffe?fu z: Ti|IETime-image,p. 129. See also the discussion of a
"gravity free world" in k Airman, General introduction to Soumf TlZeory,
Sound Proctice, pp. 3-4.
xviii
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Preface
`3 See, e.g., Laura Mulvey: "}acques Lacan has described| how the moment
when a child recognizes its own image in the mirror is crucial for the con-
stitution of the ego" ( Visual Pleasure and Narrative OneIna", p. 807). See
also Daniel Dayan "The TutorCode of Classical Cinema" p. 441; and Chris
Han Metz, / S , p. 6.
14 Jacques Aumont put it mildly: Tfte metapsychological model elaborated by
Metz, baudry and others around 1975 is not easily supported by empirical
evidence" ( The Point of View", p. 19).
xix
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Prace
Acknowledgements
The pleasures of writing this book have been many, and some
of them have to do with people and places. A draft was written
in 1991 during a year s sabbatical from the University of Otago.
It began at the Research School of Social Sciences at the Austra-
lian National University in Canberra; I doubt if there is a better
environment for philosophical research anywhere. The philos-
ophers there who helped straighten out my early ideas on the
subject I thank later. Here I thank Professor Tom Campbell, for
the use of his delightful house and exciting car. The writing
continued in Washington, D.C., and at the nearby CoHege Park
campus of the University of Maryland, where teaching the phi-
losophy of film and talking to the excellent and friendly philos-
ophers helped to give the idea of this book a workable shape.
A first draft was completed in Cambridge, where the staff and
feHows of Clare Hall made us welcome. My special thanks go
to the president, Anthony Low, and to the bursar,John Garrod.
Through that year and on subsequent occasions I gave talks,
based on draft chapters of the book, at institutions as far apart
as Tromso and Sydney, San Diego and Sussex. A great many
people made important contributions to the discussions that fol-
lowed, and I have tried to incorporate their suggestions and to
shore up my position against their criticisms in this book.
Among those whose contributions I recaH areJohn Bigelow, An-
drew Brennan, Neil Cooper, George Couvalis, Martin Davies,
John Haldane, Jane Heal, David HiHs, Robert Hopkins, lan
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Acknowledgements
xxii
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Film, 1895-1995
Film, 1895-1995
cognitive science, and very little to Freud and his followers. But
the strongest influence on this work is that almost obsessional
concern with realism so distinctive of the best in Australian phi-
losophy.
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' Oaims about the aesthetics of film based on some supposed essence of the
media are still made. Sometimes they are very strained. Thus Stanley Caved:
The most significant films . . . will be found to be those that most signifi-
candy discover and declare the nature of the medium of film . . . a feature of
the medium of film . . . is film's power of metamorphosis or transfiguration.
In remarriage comedy, this feature . . . is expressed as the womans suffering
seation, which cinematically means the transfiguration of flesh-and-blood
women into projections of themselves on the screen. Hence the obligation in
those films to find some narrative occasion for revealing . . . the womans
body' ( fJgly DuckHng Funny Butterfly', pp. ZZZ-223).
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Introduction
I. 1 FILM AS REPRESENTATION
Theessmce ~ cinema
I have no interest in distinguishmg movies and films here, and I use those
terms interchangeably, always to refer to particular works, specified or un-
specified, within the medium of cinema. But a distinction can be made, and
might be useful in other, more aesthetically wnscious contexts. See, e.g., Ger-
ald Mast, FHm/Cinemaovie.
Attempts to identify the essential features of cinema have not been very suc
cessful. Gerald Mast s idea that projection is the essential feature of the cine
matic medium is especially off the mark. Televisions failure to achieve the
clarity, luminosity and size of the cinema screen is, as Mast concedes (ibid., p.
z67), likely to be a temporary restriction that future technology will overcome
without resorting to projection. Nor is it true that projection ensures the past-
ness of the events we are watching (p. z66). And while projection may empha-
size the artificiality of cinema (p. z7o), so would many other salient pieces of
technology devised to deliver an image; see text immediately following.
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Introdudion
a device you load film into, then plug directly into your brain
to give you visual sensations exactly like those you would get
if you were watching a conventionally projected film. Isn't that
cinema without the projection of an apparently moving image
on a surface? If so, what is essential to cinema is the visual
experience, irrespective of how it is delivered. ficulties also
arise when we try to specify the more distant causes of the ex-
perience - the existence of animated film shows that the cause
need not be photographic.4 What, anyway, constitutes a photo
graphic method? Creation of a series of images by exposure to
light? Expectant parents can testify to the cinematic, or at least
televisual, quality of images produced by ultrasound. What is
so special about light rays?5
But we need not get involved in a debate about what, exactly,
constitutes allowable methods of production and delivery for
the cinema in the ordinary sense of the terrn. Instead we can
shape a concept of our own to suit our theoretical purpose.
There is a group of artefacts, interesting and worthy of study
because of the problems to which they give rise, which we may
characterize in the foHowing way. They are produced by pho
tographic means and delivered onto a surface so as to produce,
or be capable of producing, an apparently moving image. Things
of that kind I am going to can movies, films or works of cinema.
As long as it is remembered that the expressions "movie",
"film" and "cinema" have here this quasistipulative use, we
can concentrate on the dass of entities they name when so used,
and forget verbal issues. What I shall say about cinema in this
sense wHl be applicable in some degree to the plug-in, sonic,
and other nonstandard forms, as well as to real-life relatives of
film like television; but I leave it to others or another occasion
to work out precisely what degree that is.
Cinema as I define it is an essentiaHy visual medium. Movies
may or may not present audible speech and other sounds as
well as visual representations, and such auditory accompani-
ments may or may not constitute part of the fictional content
Theessmce of cinema
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
Theessmce of cinema
Introduction
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Introduction
-s Sometimes people speak and write as if fiction and film were contraries. Thus
the subtitle of a recent work announces its subject as "the rhetoric of narra-
tive in fiction and filrn", thereby imposmg one must presume, a distinction
between the two (Seymour Chatman, Conting to Tmm). But I take it this is
not so; fiction applies as much within film as it does within literature.
`6 ~ course you can write deceptive nonfiction, but I exclude that case as not
relevant here and as potentially distracting.
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Theessenceof dnema
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Introduction
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Part I
Representation in Rim
Chapter 1
Arnheim is just one of many, now as in his own day, who say
that film creates illusion. Like others, he qualifies the claim, say-
ing the iHusion is partial. I say film does no such thing; it creates
no illusion, partial or otherwise. Film has considerable powers
to engage and to persuade, but these powers are not accounted
for in terms of iHusion. I'H argue in Part II that they are ac-
counted for in terms of imagination. In this chapter we shall see
that there are different kinds of illusions, and that claims that
film engenders illusion can be more or less plausible depending
on what of illusion is in question. I'H distinguish two ds
of illusions film might be said to engender, concluding that it
engenders neither of them Before I get to that, I need to distin-
guish claims about the illusory nature of film from other claims
which are sometimes made.
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Representationin film
There is another kind of realism about film which has been his-
torically important and which I shaH not discuss: the view that
films can be placed along a dimension of realism according to
whether and to what extent they represent deeply significant
social relations.3 A fictional film might be said to be realistic in
this sense because it portrays fictional characters as standing in
social relations important for determining the outcomes of in-
terpersonal interactions in real life, and portrays the outcomes
of the characters' interactions as (largely) determined by their
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1. 2 COGNITIVE ILLUSIONS
The claim that film causes cognitive illusions is this: film watch-
ing in some systematic way, and as part of the normal process
of the viewer s engagement, causes the viewer to have the false
belief that the fictional characters and events represented are
reaL4 Strictly speaking there are weaker and stronger versions
of the thesis. A weak version says merely that the film viewer
comes to beheve that what is represented onscreen is real. A
stronger version also asserts that the viewer believes that he or
she is watching real events~ On the weak view, what is happen-
ing onscreen is taken for what it really is, namely a represen-
tation, and the illusion comes in when we say the viewer takes
it to be a representation of real events~ On this view, film func-
tions in a way not essentially different from, say, the novel. H-
lusionism about the novel says that the reader takes the events
described in the novel to be real, but no one would seriously
assert that readers think that the words on the pages they read
are those events~ As far as I can see, most people who think film
is illusionistic take the stronger view. They think film has the
4 ~In cinema it is perfectly possible to believe that a man can fly (John Ellis,
Visible Fict`lons, p. 40); ~One knows that one is watcfnng a film, but one be
Heves, even so, that it is an imaginary Isic} reality' (Maureen Turim, Flasbbact:s
in Film, p. 17); "Conditions of screening and narrative conventions give the
spectator an illusion of looking in on a private world" (Laura Mulvey, 'Visual
Pleasure and Narrative Cinema~, p. 806); 'fhe camera becomes the mecha-
nism for producing an illusion of Renaissance space~ (ibid., p~ 816)~This view
is by now more or less standard; see, e.g., Robert B~ Ray, A Certain Tendency
of tke Moll Cinema, p. 38.
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Themyth of illus'um
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Reyresentationin film
Themyth of illusion
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lengths. You are then suffering a cognitive illusion. But not all
iHusions are cognitive. You may know the two lines are of equal
length and still be subject to the Mfiller-Lyre iHusion: the lines
just /ook as if they are of different lengths. It is a common feature
of the many kinds of visual iHusions that they are, in Zenon
Pylyshyn's phrase, "cognitively impenetrable": belief doesn't
make any difference to the way the illusory phenomenon
lOOkS.13
An illusion of this kind, which is what I am going to call a
perceptua/ illusion, occurs when experience represents the world
as being a certain way, when in fact it is not that way and the
subject does not believe it to be that way. My experience of the
two lines may represent the two lines as being of unequal
length, even though I know this experience misrepresents the
relation between the lineS.14
Someone might claim that cinema is illusionistic in this per-
ceptual sense and not in the cognitive sense I have been consid-
ering up until now. My arguments so far presented against
Illusionism are ineffective against Perceptual IHusionism be
cause they are designed to show we lack the beliefs necessary
to underwrite the claim of Cognitive Illusionism. I need different
arguments if I am going to oppose Perceptual Illusionism. I shaH
13
See Zenon Pylyshyn "Computation and Cognition:Issues in the Foundations
of Cognitive Sdence", pp. In-132. See also Jerry Fodor, "Observation Re
considered'. fhis way of setting up the debate over illusion in film - in terms
of a distinction between cognitive and perceptual illusions - will do for om
purposes. Some writers are sceptical about the distinction claiming that our
perceptual systems are cognitively penetrable all the way down to the sen-
sory periphery (see, e.g., Paul M. Churchland, "Perceptual Plasticity and The
oretical Neutrality: A Reply to Jerry Fodor ', especially pp. 183-185). The
most such arguments show, I believe, is that there is a continuum between
highly cognitive mental systems withm which beliefs are formed on the basis
of other beliefs, and only marginally cognitive systems over wNch beliefs
can exert some sHght influence. What I am here calling the cognitive and
perceptual illusions supposedly created by film would then correspond to
opposite extremes of this spectrum. Ihe arguments I am considering here
are robust under shifts of framework from the dichotomy model to the con-
tinuum model. Tbe continuum model is well argued in W. M. Davies, Ex-
llerience and Content: Consequences a Continuum Theory.
14
See Christopher Peacocke, Sense and Content, pp. 5-6.
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'6 See Paul A. Boghossian and J.David Velleman, "Colour as a Secondary Qual-
ity . See also C L. Hardin, "Color Subjectivism".
`7 See Mark Johnston, "Dispositional Theories of Value'. See also PluIip Pettit
'Realism and Response Dependence" . I am especially indebted to Pettits
discussion.
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Represmtation in film
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1 .6 ON TH E M OTION O F IM AG ES
18
Hugo Munsterberg "Tfte Means of the Photoplay ', p. 332.
19
Francis Sparshott, "Basic Film Aesthetics"s p. 284. See also Haig I<hatcha-
dourian, "ftemarks on the Onematic / Uncinematic Distinction in Film Art' ,
p. 134: "a film . . . is necessan7y a sequence of visual images that create the
illusion of movement ' (emphasis in the original). Jacques Aumont and his
coauthors speak of "the simple iUusion of movement , concluding that "psy-
chologicaUy speaking a film does not exist on film stock or on the screen
but only within the mind" (Aes!tj!ctics Furn, p. 184).
20
My argument here is presented in terms of the case of cinematic represen-
tation of movement, but could easily be altered to apply against those who
deny that there is real motion observed on a television sseen or video dis
play, where the technical mechanism productive of the appearance of move
ment is different from that in the cinematic case.
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Representationin film
image which represents the man will move from one side of the
screen to the other. Movement of this kind, which is what I am
concerned with here, needs to be distinguished from the move
ment which occurs as a result of a continuous change in the
position of the camera during a single shot; the man might be
stationary relative to the background while the camera moves
with respect to him. This latter kind of movement introduces
somewhat complex considerations which I shaH not attempt to
deal with here. Also, the movement with which I am concerned
here is not the radicaHy discontinuous movement which might
be said to occur across shots, for example, when we see the
image of the man in one place on the screen in one shot, and in
another place on the screen in the next shot. AH I am claiming
here is that there really is movement within a single shot taken
from a fixed perspective. That, obviously, is enough to contra-
dict the daim that movement in film is an illusion produced by
the juxtaposition of static images.
I had also better say a word on metaphysical background.
Arguments about motion, and about change generally,
sometimes raise deep questions about what motion and change
actuaHy are. There are two basic and mutually incompatible
views about this. One, which I shall call three dimensionalism,
says that change takes place when a thing has a property at one
time which it, that very same thmg, lacks at another. The other
view, four dimensionalism, says that change occurs when a cer-
tain temporal stage possesses a property and another temporal
stage lacks it, where those stages constitute temporal stages of
the same object. I don't believe there is anything in our common
belief about change which decides one way or the other between
these two theories, and nothing I shall say about cinematic
movement here is intended to prejudge which view is correct.
So while I shall speak of our cinematic experience as represent-
ing to us that an image moves from one place to the other, this
is to be taken as neutral between the view that there is one thing
which is in one place at one time and in another place at another
time, and the view that there are distinct but suitably related
temporal parts in different places. Both constructs I take to be
inconsistent with the view that there is, literaHy, no movement
of an image on the screen.
One way to argue that there is real movement of cinematic
images would be to adopt very liberal criteria of reaHty. In par-
ticular, if we could persuade ourselves that there is no clear
distinction between what it is useful to say and what it is true
to say, it would be easy to establish the reality of cinematic
movement There is, after all, utiHty in describing a film by ref-
erence to the movement of the images it presents us with. Daniel
Donnell has recently advocated a kinder, gentler realism that
aHows us to say that aH sorts of things are real on account of
their usefulness. In Dennett s example, Smith and Jones claim
to detect different patterns in the same visual array, the differ-
ences between them being accounted for in the different signal-
tonoise ratios they claim to detect; both do fairly well in
predicting extensions of the array, chalking up their different
patterns of failure to their respective assumptions about noise.
Who is right? Both, says Dennett, and so is anyone else who can
do comparably well by detecting yet another pattern in the ar-
ray. It's no good saying, "Yes, I know they are aHmaking money
out of their systems, but who is righf?" That, for Dennett, is
symptomatic of the outmoded, inflexible and unforgiving real-
ism he wants to supersede - we might call it "first-strike real-
ism~ . While Dennett s argument is complex and fascinating at
the end of it I still wanted to retain a distinction between use
fulness and truth in areas where it seemed to me Dennett blurs
the distinction. I shaH not, therefore, be arguing for the reality
of the movement of cinematic images simply on the grounds
that it is useful for us to think and speak as if there reaHy were
such movement, though the usefulness of this way of thinking
and speaking is certainly why we are interested in whether this
n Daniel Dennett 'Real Patterns ', pp. 27-51. I am grateful toJerrold Levinson
for drawing my attention to this work, and for valuable discussion of the
topic of this chapter.
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Representationin film
" 'nus
po.mt emerged during d`Iscussionwith Graham NerHch.
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&$Remember that this question is to be taken as neutral between three and four
dimensionalism
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Reprt?sentation in Im
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30 I am grateful here to Sue Feagm and Dan Gllman for helplng me to see the
significance of this phenomenon to my theory and to Michael White, who
explained the detalls to me. The illusion descrihed is caHed "autokinetic
movement'. See E. L Brown and K. Deffenbacher, P !tan am! the Senses,
pp. 412-415.
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CWematic images are unlike those of, say, paWtmg; they are
temporary, response dependent and extrinsic in ways the irn-
ages of painting are not. Still, cinematic images are real objects,
reidentifiable across time and occupying different positions at
different times during the viewing of the shot. Or, for those who
insist on a tripartite distinction between the real, the apparent
and the Hlusory, they are apparent, nonHlusory objects. The ba-
sic mechanism of cinema is not, after aH, based on iHusion. Nor
do I believe there is any other substantial, interesting sense in
which cinema is a medium which creates illusions. Certainly, it
does not typically function to produce the cognitive illusion that
what is represented onscreen is real and present to the viewer.
Realism is a notion film theorists have been uncomfortable with
for a while. I shaH argue in Chapter 3 that it has been misun-
derstood, and that it is an indispensable tool for understanding
the nature of film. IHusion, on the other hand, is somethmg we
can well do without.
The conclusions of this chapter go beyond mm theory to em-
brace general metaphysics. It is traditional to regard motion as
a paradigmatic&Hy primary quality, to be contrasted with those
secondary qualities which are in some sense observer depend-
ent, like colour. If what I have said here about cinematic motion
is correct, we shall have to acknowledge a kind of motion which
takes its place among the secondary qualities.
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Chapter 2
There are people who say that the photographic method gives
the cinema the power not merely to represent the world, but to
present it. Exactly what this means may not be clear; I shaH try
to make it clear. But note that this claim (Fll call it the Presen-
tation Thesis) and the argument it has engendered predates the
cinema, having arisen first in connection with still photography.
I'H begin by considering the claim just for the case of still pho-
tography. Later, I shaH ask whether the daim is more plausible
when applied to the moving images of cinema. Most people who
argue for the Presentation Thesis restrict their claim to photo-
graphic images which have not been subject to substantial ma-
nipulation after exposure. I shaH follow them in this.
One source of confusion has to be deared up right away. In
the Introduction I pointed to the representational duality of film
When we ask what is represented onscreen, there are two pos-
sible kinds of answers: "Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant acting
on a set" or "two spies trying to foil a Nazi plot '. The claim
that cinematography presents rather than represents the world
must be understood as the claim that it presents the real world
of actors, props, sets and locations, not the unreal world of fic-
tional characters. If the thesis is right, film presents us with In-
grid Bergman and Cary Grant, not with the characters they play
in the movie, for these characters do not exist. Photography may
have special powers, but it does not have the power to turn
nonbeing into being.
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Andr6 Bazm, W!ni!t/s Cinema? vol. 1, p. 97. See also Stanley Cavell Wmld
V For remarks critical of the tradition see ]oeZ Snyder 'Photography
and Ontology .
'With the assistance of the camera, we can see not only around comers and
what is distant or smaU; we can also see into the past. We see long deceased
ancestors when we look at dusty snapshots of them" (Walton Transparent
Pictures" p. 251). For simifar arguments, see Roger Scruton, 'Photography
and Representa6on". But Scruton, whose concern is mostly with the aesthe6cs
of photography does not offer so precise an account of the difference between
photography and paroling. See later in th(is chapter for an analysis of some
of Scruton's arguments. For an exalrliinaHon of the fllistory of this problem
see Patrick Maynard 'Drawing and Shooting: Causafity in `f::lefnction".
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exist. You can see a painting of a dragon, but you cannot see a
dragon. Nor can you see a photograph of a dragon.
While Walton's thesis is straightforward, his argument for it
is subtle and depends on some technical notions in philosophy.
Accordingly, I shaH spend some time in laying out the argument
and explaining the technical notions. The effort will be worth it;
the argument is a good and an instructive one, even if, as I
believe, it fails to estabHsh its condusion.
Walton's thesis is not Bazin's, if we take Bazin at his literal
word. Walton's thesis is not that a photograph of X is, or is
part of, X. It is not that, when we are in the presence of a
photograph of X, we are in the presence of X. It is just that
when we see a photograph of X we see X. Photographs are,
Walton says, 'Transparent '; we see through them to the
thmgs they are of (I'11 can this the Transparency Thesis and
sometimes just "Transparency'). I shaH argue that the Trans-
parency Thesis is not susceptible to many of the criticisms lev-
eHed against other versions of the Presentation Thesis. But t
shaH also argue that Walton has failed to establish a case for
Transparency, and that what is correct in his argument can be
accommodated by the view that photographs are representa-
tional, that seeing a photograph of X is a matter of seeing a
representation of X rather than of seeing X itself. The repre-
sentations photographs give us are certainly very different in
kind from those we get by drawing and painting, and these
differences are the product of differences between the ways
photographs and hand-made images are produced. But a pho-
tographic image is a representation.
A remark on terminology: to avoid lengthy formulations I
shaH use certain expressions in a special way. I shall contrast
"ordinary seeing" with "seeing photographs", and sometimes
with "seeing paintings". In Hteral fact there is no contrast here,
because we see photographs and paintings in just the same way
we see other things - by looking at them. The intended contrast
is between seeing an object or scene in the ordinary way, when
the object is before your eyes, and seeing a photograph or paint-
ing of the object or scene.
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' "Normal" does not mean "average '. Conceivably, a majority of alI the pho
tographs ever taken were so over- or underexposed as to put the relevant
wunterfactualwnnecfions in doubt. I take "normal wndmuns" in sometlling
like Ruth Garrett MilIikans sense: a normal condition for photography is a
wndifion for its proper functioning. (See Millikan, Language, Thought, and
Other Biological Categories.)
See David Lewis, 'Veridical HaUucination and Prosthetic Vision'. The con-
dition of counter,actual dependence ma y not be sufficient for seeing; see Mar-
tin Davies, Function in Perception".
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X wlll
display the visible properties of X in such a way that, if
those visible properties were different, the painted image would
be correspondingly different. If the building were differently
shaped the painter would paint a correspondingly different
shape on the canvas. But in the case of the painting, and not in
that of the photograph, counterfactual dependence is mediated
by the beliefs of the artist. The appearance of the painting de
pends counterfactuaHy on the appearance of the object because
the beliefs of the painter are similarly dependent. If the painter
were having an haHucination, thinking there was a pink ele
phant in front of him, his painting would display a pink ele
phant, not the actual scene before his eyes. With the photograph
things are different. Because of the "mechanical" way photo
graphs are made, it does not matter what the photographer
thmks the object in front of the lens looks like; once the camera
is set up and the film exposed, the camera records the scene
before it. Imagine the same scene successively photographed
and sketched. Now imagine that the scene had looked different
in some way; in that case the photograph and the sketch would
both look different. Now imagine that the scene had looked dif-
ferent and the artist s belt about the scene's appearance remained
the same. In that case only the photograph would be different.
Both the photograph and the sketch depend for their appear-
ances on the appearance of the scene, but in the sketch and not
in the photograph, that dependence is mediated by the artist s
beliefs and other mental states.
We can extend this counterfactual dependence between scene
and photograph/sketch to a similar dependence between the
scene and my visual experience of the photograph/sketch. Had
the scene been different my visual experience on looking at the
photograph/sketch would have been different. But if the scene
had been different and the artist s mental states the same, my
experience of looking at the photograph would have been dif-
ferent, while my experience of seeing the sketch would have
been the same. In the case of the photograph, the counterfactual
dependence between the scene and the observer's visual expe
rience is, we may say, independent of belief, but in the case of
the sketch it is not. That is why we might find, in the photo
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2 .5 IN C ON C LUS IV E ARC UM EN TS
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" Thus Arnheim: "People who contemptuously refer to the camera as an au-
tomatic recording machine must be made to realize that even in the simplest
photographic reproduction of a perfectly simple object, a feeling for its nature
is required wNch is quite beyond any mechanical operation" (Film as Art,
p. 19).
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'&See Ted Cohen, 'What's Special About Photography?" See also ]&Ivie, Phi-
losophy the Film, p. 109.
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seeing are not much alike? No. First of all, light is not essential
to seeing. It is true that, for our organs of sight to function
unaided, light rays must be reflected from an object into our
eyes. But there cou/d be seeing in which light rays play no part.
Richard Dawkins raises the possibility that bats might have vi-
sual experiences qualitatively similar to our own, but caused by
their very different perceptual systems, which depend on bounc-
ing sound waves off solid objects.13 I understand this is not likely
to be true of real bats,14 but we can imagine batlike creatures
complex enough for this to be a plausible story. Their visual
sensations, if they exist, are caused by sound waves instead of
by light - an odd idea, but not a confused one. Sonar is capable
of giving information about objects in a creature's local environ-
ment which is sufficiently detailed and up-tothe minute for the
creature to build up a complex mental representation of its en-
vironment. This representation is informative in the way our
visual representation of the environment is. Super bat sonar is
not functionally dissimilar from our organs of sight; whether the
representations it gives are qualitatively like our visual ones we
cannot know, but there is no reason in prindple why they could
not be. Perhaps we shall invent a device which emits high-
frequency sound waves, which can be fitted to humans as a
prosthesis and which gives us visual sensations as a result. Then
the blind would have their sight restored; they would "see" by
means of sound waveS.'5
You may respond that, while seeing need not involve light
rays, it must involve the uninterrupted transmission of
something functionally equivalent (modulo the purposes of see
ing) to a light wave, and sound waves might do the job. It is
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he said to see in that case. But if Helen is given visual experiences wrre
spending to what she would see if her eyes were functioning, it is much
dearer that she does genuinely see, and under conditions of intentional de
pendence.
x9 Walton 'Transparent Pictures" p. 271: "A process of discrimination wants
as perceptual ozzlg z! its structure is thus analogous to the structure of the
world" (my italics).
x9 fhid., p. 270
ao Ihid.
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24 I don't say we could not perceive heat in any way other than via the heat
receptors at the skin. If our eyes were so constructed that we had mono
chromatic vision, and things looked darker the hotter they were, then per-
haps we would see heat (see Paul M. Churchland, Scienc Realism and the
Plasticity Mind). Snakes, apparently, see heat (as Marty Davies pointed out
to me; see Peacocke, Sense and Content, p. 90n; and E. Newman and P. Hart-
line, The Infrared Vision' of Snakes". I say only that we do perceive heat
through our skin, and not by looking at thermometers.
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34 They are natural representations because the processes by which they func-
tion exhibit natural dependence. They are re}!7resentatWnsbecause they are
used as such by us. I am not suggesting that something can be regarded as
a representation (natural or otherwise) without reference to human intention.
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2 . 9 TH E A ESTH ETIC S O F P H O TO GR A P HY
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37 Ibid., p. 115.
38 "Should" tn the sense of "having reason to be.
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4 'See:Ing
through photographs "is like the ordinary variety [of seeing} in that
only what exists can he seen"; Walton, "Transparent Pictures', p. 254. See
also Scruton, "Photography and Representation", p. 11 z: "ff a photograph is
a photograph of a man, there is some particular man of whom it is a pho
tograph."
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41 }take the example of shadow play from Maynard, "Drawing and Shooting".
42 That ts, if we keep fixed the beliefs of the shadow maker, the appearance of
the shadow will depend counterfactually on the disposition of my hands.
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Chapter 3
Realism
The guiding myth, then, inspiring the invention of
cinema, is . . . a re creation of the world in its own
image.
And Bazin
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3 .1 D EPICTIONS
Though philosophers have denied it, certain pictures do seem
to be like their subjects; not so like them as to be indistinguish-
able, except under very peculiar circumstances, but like them
nonetheless. Indeed, the denials of philosophers in this regard
have an air of paradox. The likeness we think there is between
some pictures and the things they are of is, of course, a matter
of likeness of appearance; no one is (or should be) daiming that
people and pictures of people belong to the same natural kind,
or have the same essence. So what is claimed is that certain
pictures and their subjects aear alike: that the experience of
looking at the picture is in certain respects like that of looking
at the subject. But how could philosophers be better placed than
ordinary folk when it comes to judging what experiences are
like others? Denying that pictures and their subjects can be alike
in this sense seems well beyond the competence of a philoso-
pher.
The sense in which pictures (or, as I shaH sometimes say,
depictions) can be like their subjects is not merely a matter of
being "true to" the subjects. A description of a man can be ac-
curate, without the experience of reading the description being
anything like the experience of looking at the man. There can
be accuracy without likeness, as a description can be accurate
without being like its subject. When we read a description, we
may recognize what is being described, and when we look at a
depiction we may recognize what it depicts, but we do these
things in fundamentaHy different ways. To comprehend the de-
scription I deploy my linguistic capacities, my understanding of
the semantics and syntax of the language. To see that the picture
is a picture of a horse, I deploy my horse-recognition capacities.
That is, I use the same capacity to recognize the picture of a
horse that I use to recognize a horse.'
We recognize objects when we see them by recognizing cer-
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' I am indebted here, as elsewhere in this chapter, to the work of int Schjer.
See his DccPcr into Picintes, especially section 9.3.
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6 For more on this process of object recognition, see Chapter 4, section 4.8.
7 As Daniel Gilman puts it, 'If our perception of form, space and pattern is
largely Rxed by these fast, automatic early neurological processes, there
is . . . no need for illusion here; we typically have a variety of submechanisms
at play and the organism need not be fooled about what it is seeing just
because some of its mechanisms respond alike to picture and subject ' (,'Fic
tores in Cognition").
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weak version of the idea that really seeing things has what we
might can "recognitional primacy" over seeing depictions of
them. The weak thesis is this: that it is not possible to acquire
the capacity to see something in a picture unless you already
have the capacity to see something else in the picture, and ex-
ercise that latter capacity in coming to acquire the former one.
let us say that when an F-recognitional capacity is acquired by
looking at pictures of Fs, it is acquired pictorially. Then, com-
bining the capacity-identity claim and the weak thesis, we say:
For every F, it is possible that the F-recognitional capacity is
acquired pictorially, but it is not possible for every F-recogni-
tional capacity to be acquired pictoriaHy.
It is also a consequence of my explanation of depiction that
you cannot tell for certain whether something is a depiction just
by looking at it; something is a picture if it functions in a certain
way, and not otherwise, whatever its appearance. Thus we
might devise a hieroglyphic version of English in which little
iwns replace names, thus: is tall," where the icon replaces
the name "Fred" The icon may look like Fred, or as much like
Fred as any picture looks like its subject. It may trigger your
Fred-recognition capacity in virtue of its likeness to Fred But
the icon is not, in this context, a picture; it serves merely to refer
to Fred, and not to make any claim about him - the claim is
made by the sentence in which the icon occurs. And what is
daimed in this sentence about Fred depends not at aH on the
spatial properties of the icon, but merely on its being a referring
device.8
By explaining depiction in terms of visual capacities to rec-
ognize objects, I have confined the notion of depiction to vi-
sual media. That is certainly in line with our common
understanding of the idea of depiction. But having explained
depiction that way, there is a natural generalization of the no
Hon to other media. Thus, to consider a somewhat artificial ex-
ample, we can conceive an art of olfactory representation in
which smells are represented How are they to be represented?
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All sorts of ways are possible, of course, but one natural way
would be simply to rely on the odour-recognition capacities of
the audience; when the artist wants us to recognize that odour
X is represented, he or she gives us a representation with
odour properties which trigger our odour-X recognitional ca-
pacities. That, roughly, is the function of the scratch cards
handed out to members of the audience at some showings of
John Waters's Pink Flamingos. Such a device is of questionable
usefulness or aesthetic merit. But film commonly and profita-
bly uses depictive representation, in my now-generalized
sense, along another dimension of perception: diegetic sound
When the film represents, by means of diegetic sound, the
character speaking we recognize what the character is de
picted as saying by using our capacity to understand the
speech of others when we hear it. So film is realistic along (at
least) two dimensions: visual images and diegetic sound By
contrast, the use of subtitles ~is not, in my sense, a realistic
mode of representation, a point I made briefly in the Introduc-
tion. When the film represents a character as spea by
means of subtitles we recognize what is said not by our ca-
pacity to understand speech but by our capacity to read
3. 2 NATURAL G ENERATIVITY
9 The term is due to Flint Schier. For a detailed and iHurninating discussion see
his Deeper into Pictures. See also Richard Wollheirn, Painting as an Art, p. 77;
and Crispin Sartwell "Natural Generativity and Irnitation'.
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Ru|ism
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" We can order textual elements temporaUy if we want to, for example, by
time of composiHon. But neitller that nor any otber temporal order we could
impose would ten us anything constitutive about tbe work.
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14 As Gerard Genette says, 'rfho narrative text, iike every other text, has no
other temporauty than what it borrows, metanymically, from its own read-
ing' (Narratioe Discourse, p. 34).
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Palace, wherein events earlier in the life of the Virgin are rep
resented deeper within the picture space; and by special tech-
niques such as blurring and multiple exposure. Music, if it is a
representational art, can surely represent spatial and temporal
relations.
The capacity to represent the temporal - call it "temporalityr"
- is one further good sense in which something can be a tem-
poral art. But as the examples just given show, it is a relatively
undiscriminating sense; it is hard to think of an art form capable
of representation which is not temporal in this sense. Note, how-
ever, that it is not so undiscriminating as to make every repre
sentational work a work of temporal art. Paintings can lack the
kinds of narrative contents and associations that would render
them temporalr; in terms of our earner taxonomy, temporalityr
inheres only weakly in painting. Later, I shaH ask whether it
inheres weakly or strongly in cinema. But certainly it does in-
here in cinema; cinema makes the representation of temporal
relations ssible. In fact the vast majority of films do represent
temporal properties and relations.
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they describe take time, but the length of the time necessary to read the work,
or part thereof, is not in general a guide to the length of time taken by the
events narrated. Mieke Eal says that narrative writing is "iconic because it
resembles its content "since both wntain a lapse of tinne' ' ("f:)escription as
Narration", in On Story-Telling, p. 116). But this iconicity is very weak com
pared with the rich temporal correspondence possible in filrn
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`7 You might argue that what is represented here is not the whole serrnon but
just a few parts of it, and thus we can preserve the default setting. But
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to insist on this rnove in all cases would be, in effect, to identify what is
represented with what is displayed, and that identification is hard to sustain.
There is a sirnilar device in Clouzot's Wages of Fear.
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t.une later '. The time taken for the dissolve can be considered
to make a contribution to the representation of this temporal
relation only if it can be thought of as operating dmt1aHy.
That is, it must be the case that if the dissolve had taken less
time or more time, then the dissolve would have signalled a
correspondingly smaller or greater gap between the represented
events. In certain cases, especially when there are several quick
dissolves in succession, one can understand temporal represen-
tation to be working like that; a dissolve longer than the norm
for this film, or longer than the last one, might indicate a pro
portionately greater time lapse. But if the sign saying "twenty
years later ' had been on the screen a few seconds longer than
it was, that would have made no difference to the fact that there
is twenty years between the represented events, and time con-
sequently plays no representing role here.
So there are three kinds of cases: pure representation of the
temporal by the temporal; pure representation of the temporal
by nontemporal properties; and mixed (and, I believe, unusual)
cases where the temporal and the nontemporal conspire to-
gether to represent the temporal.
Sometimes when an art form is said to be temporal, what is
meant is that the form in question is especially adapted to the
representation of the temporal, that its capacity for representing
the temporal is peculiarly rich and subtle. The temporality of
cinema partly explains why this medium is said to be rich and
subtle in its representation of tune. Homomorphic and espe
cially automorphic representations of the temporal make for
ease and flexibility. In film we get precise and detailed infor-
mation about temporal duration and relations, and only in the
most obscure narratives, like `Last Year at Marterlf|ad, does the
quality of temporal information become significantly degraded.
Yet even here there is, by comparison with, say, painting or the
novel, a rich structure of temporal information concerning the
'6 Gerald Mast may have had something like this in mind when he said, 'Th e
cinema is the tmest timeart of all since it most dosely parallels the operation
of time itself." See Mast, FilminemaiMovie, p. 112. Quoted in Levinson and
^}person, w/Zat /s a TsmFora/ Art?
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Rail.Sm
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fHm, but clearly not automorphically. How, then, are they rep
resented?
I think that absolute spatial properties are represented by rel-
ative spatial properties of representations, taken in conjunction
with background assumptions about what is normal by real-
world standards. Thus the relative spatial properties of cine
matic representations function automorphicaHy to represent the
relative spatial properties of what is represented, and nonauto-
morphically to represent absolute spatial properties.
This discussion should make it clear that the representation
of spatial properties and that of temporal ones in film are dif-
ferently implemented, and that the representation of space is
more difficult than that of time. The representation of temporal
properties is, for cinema, relatively straightforward, for two
reasons. First, time's one dimensionality means that keeping
track of the duration and succession of onscreen events is rela-
tively simple, whereas the representation of objects in three
dimensional space on a twodimensional screen leads inevitably
to a degradation of information. Worse, cinema imposes a double
relativity on spatial properties, for it represents them perspec-
tively; it is relative spatial properties as perceived from a certain
point view (namely, that of the camera) that are represented.
When the actor advances towards the camera against a Bxed
background, the result is a representation of change in the op
parent relations of size between char acter and setting that may
not, and usually does not, represent any such actual change.
Something vaguely like this can, and occasionaHy does, occur,
for the presentation of time in film; I am thinking of Eisenstein's
"stretching out ' of the time it takes the soldiers to clear the steps
at Odessa in Potemkin. Perhaps this is a representation of the
time those events seemed to take for those participating in them:
a time distinct from that which those events actuaHy took.'9 But
this capacity of film to represent time in a quasi-perspectival
`9 Perhaps, but actually I doubt it. In an earner scene there is a sirnilar, but
very brief, stretching of time, when a sailor breaks a plate. That occurrence
is not plausibly understood as representing the sailor s subjective perception
of the tirne involved. Rather, it is done for dramatic effect; so, I irnagine, is
the scene on the steps.
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QCThere can be exceptions, as when the entire action takes place on Mount
Olympus and all the characters are gods.
R See 8ordwell, Narratian in t FictWn Film, p. 6.
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From what I have said about mm's depiction of space and time, it
follows that film has the capacity for realism not merely in its de
picfion of objects but in its depiction of spatial and temporal re
lations between those objects. When objects and events are
represented onscreen within a single shot, we are able to judge
what spatial and temporal relations the film represents as holding
between those objects and events, by using our ordinary capaci-
ties to judge the spatial and temporal relations between objects
and events themselves. We judge the spatial relations between
objects represented in the same shot by seeing that they are spa-
Hang related thus and so. We judge the temporal properties of,
and relations between, events represented within the shot by not-
ing that this event Wok (roughly) so long to observe, while that
one was experienced as occurring later than the other one. That is
exactly how we judge the spatial and temporal properties of
thmgs and events as we perceive them in the real world.u
n Edward Branigan argues that the relation between the time of viewing and
the time of the fictional events themselves is wnventional, on the grounds
that what one notices during the period of sseen time varies across persons
and occasions (Narralive Conllnehenshm and Film, p. 149). But this undoubted
fact has no tendency to undermine the daim that within a shot, the standard
relation between screen time and the time of fictional events is identity, and
its being so relies on no convention whatsoever.
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gether.~ But this does not seriously detract from the percep
tual realism of deepfocus style. p focus, particularly when
used in conjunction with wide screen, enables us to concen-
trate our attention on one object, then to shift our attention at
will to another object, just as we are able to do when perceiv-
ing the real world. Since we are usually not very conscious of
refocusing our eyes, the similarities between viewing deep
focus style and perceiving the real world are more striking
than the differences. With montage and narrow-focus styles,
on the other hand, we are severely limited by shot length and
depth of field in our capacity to shift our attention from one
object to another at will - though as I have said, this feature is
not entirely absent in montage style.
To summarize: film is, in one sense, a realistic medium. It is
capable of representing depictively, and thereby enables us to
use our visual capacities to identify objects in order to know
that those very objects are represented onscreen. Further, it is
capable of representing spatiotemporal relations between objects
in the same way; we use our capacities to identify spatiotem-
poral relations between things in order to know that those re
lations hold between the things represented onscreen. And
long-take, deepfocus style is more realistic than some other
styles in that it allows for more of this kind of representation of
spatiotemporal relations.
'31 See e.g., Patrick Ogle, Technological and Aesthetic Influences on the De
velopment of DeepFocus Cinematography in the United States"~
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25
What is called the analogy, the resemblance . . . really lies within a whole
group of highly elaborate mental and social organizations . . . and the appre
hension of a resemblance impUes an entire construction whose modaUties
vary notably down through history, or from one society to another. In this
sense the analogy is, itself, codified (Metz, "Cinematographic language,
p. 584).
26
As Wollheim points out, people from other cultures would not be able to
make the mistakes they are said to make about perspective in the Western.
style pictures with which they are presented if they could not recognize
representational features of those pictures (Wollheim, Painting as an Art, p.
53). Work by Hudson which purports to show that black southern Africans
do not readily understand the depictive content of Western perspective has
been severely criticized; see R. K. Jones and M. A. Hagen, "A Perspective on
Crosscultural Picture Perception".
27
In an experiment by Premack and Woodruff, a chimp, Sarah, was shown a
film of an actor trying to reach some bananas suspended above him; she was
then asked to choose from various photographs depicting further possible
moves in the attempt Sarah chose the picture that showed the actor piling
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sates undemeath the bananas, thereby displaying her recognition that this
was the correct solution. The central daim of this paper - that chimps have
a theory of mind - must be treated with some scepticism, but the evidence
on which the authors built their theorizing - the ability of chimps to sort
photographs acwrding to whether they represented a solution to the problem
in hand - is not disputed. See D. Premack and G. Woodruff, Does the
Chimpanzee Have a Theory of Mind?'
28
fhe very necessity of depicting a bulky three dimensional obied as a flat,
twodimensional image testifies to a certain conventionality' (Juri Lotman,
iotics of the Cinmm, p. 6). A version of this argument can be found in
almost every discussion of film semiotics. See, e.g., Hubert Lapsley and Mi-
chael Westlake, Film Theory: An Introduction, p. 45. For more detail on the
notion of a convention, see tfns volume, Chapter 4.
29
See, e.g., fleShossian and VeHeman, "Colour as a Secondary ~Quahty'
. This
view goes back to Galileo.
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Chapter 4
Languages of art and languages
of Rim
. . . the proper objects of sight are lights and colours,
with their several shades and degre all which, be
ing infinitely diversified and combined, form a lan-
guage wonderfully adapted to suggest and exhibit to
us the distances, figures, situations, dimension, and
various qualities of tangible objects: not by similitude,
nor yet by inference of necessary connection, but by
the arbitrary imposition of providence, just as words
suggest the things signified by them.
Gee Ber~l~
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alley after another, the idea that structure is the key to under-
standing ourselves and our culture has proved surprisingly re
silient; the grudging recognition one hears from time to time
that cinema is, after all, really rather different from anything we
would normally call a language goes along with an enduring
belief that, at some level, an underlying similarity will be found.
Where did the structuralists go wrong? Enthusiastic for uni-
versal principles in the human sciences, they fastened onto the
success of theoretical linguistics, hoping to explain other human
activities on the same basis. Thus the structuralist Tzvetan To
dorov: "ff we admit the existence of a universal grammar, we
must no longer limit it to language alone. It will have, evidently,
a psychological reality. . . . This psychological reality makes
plausible the existence of the same structure elsewhere than in
speech'.3 The structuralist s strategy was to explain our com-
petence in nonlinguistic - or at least not obviously linguistic -
domains by appeal to those mental structures that underlie our
linguistic competence, and thereby to show that those other do
mains are, after all, basically linguistic in structure.4 That strat-
egy derives from a view of the mind as a unified or at least
highly interconnected mechanism in which basically the same
competencies apply across domains. I have already rejected that
view of the mind. I have argued that the mind is a complex, less
than fully integrated institution with relatively autonomous de
partments dedicated to specific functions. Currently available
evidence suggests that language is a particularly good example
of this "vertical" structuring of the mind. A childs acquisition
of linguistic skills seems to be remarkably insensitive to varia-
tions in her other competencies, including perceptual ones. For
example, the use of personal pronouns emerges in congenitally
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deaf children who employ sign language at just the same time
as in hearing children, with both groups going through a period
of pronoun reversal, confusing "you" and "I".5 fhere just is no
reason - apart from the initial plausibility and simplicity of the
idea - to suppose that mental structures designed to accomplish
one kind of task will be similar in any interesting way to other
such structures, or that a structure used for one purpose will
turn out to be used for others.6
If the view that there is a language of picturing is to be re
jected, perhaps'there is another hypothesis to be considered: that
film is not to be analysed as a language, but as an example of
the broader category of semiotic systems. In that case cinema
falls within the scope of a more general theory that indudes both
natural languages and a great deal else: everything, in fact, that
is a system of signs. If the hypothesis that cinema is a language
is to be rejected, perhaps we should consider the weaker posi-
tion of the semioticists - weaker because the hypothesis that
cinema is a language entails but is not entailed by the hypothesis
that it is a semiotic system. But I shaH not confront the semiotic
hypothesis in any detail. One reason is that the generality aimed
for in semiotics has resulted in a great deal of taxonomizing but
little identifiable as theory. It has also never been made clear
what a "code" is supposed to be, though codes are what semf.
oticists are apparently most interested in finding. Nor is it easy
to read off a characterization from the examples offered. Among
cinematic codes there are, we are told, "the complex system
according to which the cinematic equipment (recording camera,
film strip, projector) 'reproduces movement ",7 and "the rep
resentational code of linear perspective".8 It is hard to think of
a definition of code which would cover these two items and not
cover everything else. So a critical assessment of the semiotic
hypothesis would require us to figure out what the hypothesis
is, exactly. Or, if there is no clear hypothesis available, we shall
s See L A. Petitto, "On the Autonomy of Language and Gesture: Evidence from
the Acquisition of Pronouns in American Sign Language".
6 For more on Structuralism see Chapter 9, Section 9.4.
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9 "Signs are correlated with what they stand for on the basis of a rule or a
convention" (Umberto Eco, "On the Contribution of Film to Semiotics",
p. 196).
o On the socalled medium-transferability of natural languages seeJohn Lyons,
Language and Linguistics, p. 11.
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I don't say we team our language entirely from the bottom up. No doubt
we start with simple sentences, shake out the word meanings by decompo
sition, and zigzag back and forth continually expanding our competence in
a way governed partly by trial and error. What is daimed is simply that if
the meanings of linguistic units could not, in principle, be stated recursively
the language would not be learnable.
Not word is an atom, as when a single word has a meaning that is a
function of the meaning of other words and operators, as with "invatid".
This account of meaning in natural language contradicts the structuralists
daim that linguistic meaning is whoUy a matter of a sign's relations to other
signs. That is as it should be; a change in the meaning of one term does not
induce a change in the meanings of aU terms.
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`QAlternatively we can say that in such cases them are two distinct but iden-
ticaHy spelled words, each with its own (unique) meaning convention at-
tached.
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,s See 'Sectlon
3.1 'Inthe previous chapter; and Schler, D into Pictures See
also SartweU, "Natural Generativity and Imitation" , especially pp. 186-187.
Eco, "On the Contribu6on of FUrn to SelnioHcs", p. 207.
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An enthusiast for the language of images might try one last line
of defence. According to my argument, we understand the de-
pictive content of images by deploying the capacities we have
to recognize the objects depicted. How, in fad, do we recognize
those objects? How, in other words, does ordinary vision work?
The answer is, I'm afraid, that we do not know. But one recent,
plausible and to some extent empiricaHy supported hypothesis
might give hope that we are on the verge of discovering a lan-
guage of vision. The hypothesis in question is that "a given view
of an object is represented as an arrangement of simple primitive
volumes, called geons". Geons are volumes which belong to a
larger set of volumes caned generaBzed cones; geons indude
cubes, cones, pyramids, cylinders and other simple and familiar
geometrical shapes in three dimensions. According to this hy-
pothesis (sometimes called "recognition-by-components") com-
binations of two, or at most three, geons are sufficient to specify
just about any object people typicaHy are able to identify (there
are currently estimated to be about thirty thousand of them).
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Part II
Imagination
Chapter 5
Imagination, the generai theory
Irnagination, without inducing the experience I imag-
ine, delivers the fruits of experience.
Richard Wollhcim
' See, e.g., Richard Wollheim 'fmagina6on and Identification", especially the
later part. It is noticeable that when occasionally a writer on film seeks a
theoretical alternative to the Lacanian framework, the alternative is still lo
cated withm the realm of theorizing about the psychopathological - as with
Gaylyn Studier ( Masochism and the Perverse Pleasures of the Onema"),
who turns to Gilles Deleuze s Masochism: An InterIn.etatkm Coldness and Cru-
elty.
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Between roughly the ages of three and a half and four and a
half, children normally undergo an important shift in their un-
derstanding of the relation between themselves and others.
Before the shift, children find it difficult to understand that
someone's beliefs can be different from their own; the shift oc-
curs when they come to understand this. Here's an experiment
which illustrates this rather vividly.4
SaHy, a puppet, is seen to hide a sweet in box A. She leaves
the room. Another puppet is seen to move the sweet to box B.
` This problem was pointed out by Alan LesHe, "Pretence and Representation:
The origins of 'Tfleoryof Mind' ". But I reiect Leslies solution. See my 'Imag-
ination and Simulation: Aesthetics Meets Cognitive Science".
3 Occasionally, governments cotton on to the power of imagination. According
to the Guardfan (August 2s 1992), 'Imagining the president s death is in ]Kenya
a crifne punishable by death."
The experiment was devised by Hans W`unmer and Josef Perner. See their
"Beliefs about Beliefs: Representation and Constraining Function of Wrong
BeBefs in Young Children's Understanding of Deception". fheir result has
been replicated in a great variety of settings.
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Imagination,the generuItheory
Sally returns. Question: where does Sally think her sweet is?
Three year-olds say 'box B". The child thinks the sweet is in
box B, having seen it moved there. The child then credits SaHy
with a belief the same as his or her own. By four and a half,
most children reahze that SaHy did not see the sweet moved,
and that her belief will consequently differ from the child's own.
Before the shift, the child attributes to others his or her own
perspective on the world. After the shift the child is able to
calculate how a different perspective will lead to different be
liefs.
Perhaps "calculate" isn't quite the right word here. Calcula-
tion suggests that the child possesses some sort of theory - per-
haps a tacit theory, not consciously understood - and applies
the theory to work out, in a particular case, what the other per-
son's belief will be. For instance, the child might, in responding
to the SaHy experiment, apply the principle that if someone does
not see something happen they will generally not know that it
has happened, conduding that SaHy does not know that the
sweet has been moved. Many psychologists and philosophers
working in the area of cognitive science think that this is, in fact,
what the child does. They think that the shift in understanding
I have just described occurs when the child acquires a new the
ory or part of a theory, a theory of mind, or acquires the ability
to access and apply that theory.5 But that is not the only possible
view. One can suppose instead that the shift comes about
through the acquisition of an ability, not through the acquisition
of a theoretical principle, albeit a rough-and-ready one. On this
view, the shift is a matter of owing how rather than owing
that.6
SeeF e.g., S. 8aronCohen et al., 'I:)|oes the Autistic Child Have a Theory of
Mind'Ts; lesHe, 'Pretence and Representation'; and S. Sticfz and S. Nichols,
'Second Thoughts on Simulation". On some views, 1-eslie s for example, the
theory in question is presumed to be innate. According to others it is learned.
See, e.g., Alison Gopnik, "What Is It if It Isn't a fheory?"
Alvin Goldman, "Interpretation Psychologized"; Robert M. Gordon, "Folk
Psychology as Simulation's; Jane Heal, "Replication and Functionalism"; and
the articles in a double issue of Mz.ndand Language, 7, nos. 1-Z (1992) devoted
to simulation theory.
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5.2 SIMULATION
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"j For more on this absence of beHef problem, see my Nature Fiction, chapter
5. See also this chapter, SecHon 5.4.
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'4 of course, I can imagine that no one is doing any imagining, hut I trust
Ah;K:)l,
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17
There are times when secondary imagining fails us, because our minds are
not attuned to the task at hand. Boded Gordon drew my attention to the
foUowing passage from Time magazine (May 9, 1994), by John Show, entitled
"Hamid Brodkey s New Novel Is Erotic - But Not to Everybody : We re
spond to stories with astonishing versatility of imagination~ The three year-
old listening to his grandmother momentarily becomes Peter Rabbit; the
geezer reading Patrick OBrian's sea stories feels scared on the quarterdeck
of a storm-blown frigate. But the distinction between what the reader imag-
ines and what he actuaUy experiences remains solid - the geezer does not
actually get seasick. Over the whole range of Uterature, only erotica functions
differendy. If it works, sexual arousal is real, not imaginary~ And if it doesn't
work? The most recent example is Hamid Brodkey s novel Pam? Friemtship
(Fanar, Straus & Giroux; 387 pages; $z3). The author tells of a long intensely
erotic affair between the narrator, an American novelist named Nino, and an
Italian named Gnni. The names are anagrams of each other - different stir-
rings of the same ingredients, including the same sex. if the drama is to
succeed, the passion must not merely engage the reader intellectuaUy; it must
arouse hirn. For this heterosexual male, who has imagined himself to be MoU
Flanders and Jonathan Uvingston Seagull the failure is total. Such a state
ment will surely be caned homophobia, but fear and disapproval are not
operating here. In fad, notfLing is operating The reader's reaction is vague
exasperation. His mind simply does not have the software to induce the
intended physiological response to the author s erotic obsessions, and these
are the essence of the book. Such thoughts, of course, must occur regularly
to gays when they read about hetero sex. You don't have to be a rabbit to
enjoy Beatrix Potter, but you may have to be either gay or straight to appre
date gay or straight erotica."
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Lewis has called the problem of the flash stockman. Try imag-
ining someone else imagining something; what tends to happen
is that you end up imagining the something yourself. And with
those fictions, like A usand and One Nights, where what is
fictional is that someone is telling a fictional story, we very
quickly move to the position where we are imagining the story
told, not the telling of it. Why does imagining that some
one imagines P tend to collapse into imagining P, whereas, for
example, believing that someone believes P rarely collapses
into believing P? If imagining is simulation, then imagining
someone's imaginings is a matter of simulating her simulation.
How would that work? Consider first the ordinary case: I sim-
ulate her beliefs and desires rather than her imaginings. Sim-
plifying suppose she believes P and desires Q; I then give
myself appropriately off-line versions of P and Q. P, for me, is
a case of pretend belief, and Q is a case of pretend desire. In
this case I simulate the having of belief P and desire Q. Now
consider the more complex case: I simulate her imagining that
is, her pretend beliefs and pretend desires. Suppose she has P
as a pretend belief and Q as a pretend desire; she is, in other
words, running off-line versions of P and Q. To model her men-
tal processes in my own mind (in other words, to simulate her),
what must I do? The answer is that I also must run off-line
versions of P and Q. But we have seen, from an examination of
the simple case, that this - running off-line versions of P and Q
- is what counts for me as having P as a pretend belief and Q
as a pretend desire.The attempt to simulate her simulation has
resulted in my simply imagining what it is she imagines, and
not her imagining of it.
In this chapter I have simply asserted a claim I have argued
elsewhere - that we engage with a fictional story by imagining
its content, or what is "true in the fiction". An objection to this
is that a good deal of the content of a fictional story is true, and
known to be so by the audience. Thus what happens in fiction
often happens against a background of reallocations correctly
" See David Lewis, postscript to "Tf.uth in Fiction", Philasophical Papers, voL 1.
= See Currie, Nature Fiction, chapter z.
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&fAlan Lesh.e d~lscusses the issue of pretending what is believed in his "Pro
tending and Believing: Issues in the Theory of ToMM'~ I owe the reference
to Vygotsky to Leslie's paper (see L. S. Vygotsky, 'Play and Its Role in the
Mental I::)evelopment of the CNM"). For criticism of Leslie s theoretical ap
preach to the issue of pretence, see my "Imagination and Simulation".
See, e.g, NI Carroll, The Ph~dosophyof Horror: Paradoxes of the Heart; and
Anders Pettersson, "On Walton's and Currie's Analysis of Fiction".
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26
Perhaps haHucinations, or some of them, are produced by really spectacular
blowouts in the inhibitory system~
37
Tbere is experimental evidence that children can come to believe, or be prone
to believe, things which they have initiaHy been asf;ed merely to imagine
being the case. See C N Johnson and Paul L. Harris, "Magic: Special but
Not Exduded"; and Jacqueline D. WooHey and Katrine E. Phelps, 'Young
Children's Practical Reasoning about Imagmation". For interesting evidence
of leakage the other way - from beliefs and desires to imagination, see Nigel
Harvey, Wishful Thinking Impairs Belief-Desire Reasoning: A Case of De
wupling Failure in Adults?" The idea that there might be breakdowns in the
mechanism of inhibition governing an off"line process may be useful in other
areas. Jeannerod has recently suggested that certain kinds of wmpulsive im-
itative behaviour may be explained by a breakdown in the inbibitory wntrol
which governs motor imagery; in these cases, imagining performing a move
meat leads inevitably to actually performing it (M. Jeannerod, "The Repre
senting Brain: Neural Correlates of Motor Intention and Imagery , p. zoo).
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Chapter 6
Imagination, personal and impersonal
A film makes us feel like eye-witnesses of the events
which it portrays.
Victor Perkins
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' Jean Mitty, quoted approvingly both in Wilson, Narration in Light, p. 55, and
in Charles Affron, Cinema and Sentiment, p. 7 . The quotaHon is from Esthltiaue
et psychologie du ci I: !es structures, p. 179.
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' This thesis, or something like it, seems to be implicit in the work of early
theorists like Ml[msterberg and Pudovkin
4 'fn cinema it is not possible to speak, in the strict sense, of a narrator. The
fifm does not narrate, but rather it places the spectator directly without in-
termediaries, in the presence of the facts narrated~ (Julio Moreno, "Subjective
Cinema: The Problem of Film in the Fnst Person~, p. 354. Quoted in Branigan,
Narrative Comprehension ana Film, p. 144).
s As I noted earlier, viewers of Waters's Pink F/amin8os are somett:irflesprovided
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What of theatre? You may argue that the theatre goer imagines
that he sees Othello when he sees the actor playing Othello on
the stage. But there's a difference between the theatrical and the
cinematic case that any theory will need to accommodate. The
view I ascribed to writers like Panofsky and Mitry is that we
imagine not only that we see the characters in the film, but that
we do so by occupying a certain position within its "space" or
"world", and the position we occupy is that of the camera. What
makes that a plausible hypothesis is that the role of the camera
gives the movie what we might call an !ntr!ns!c point of view,
a point of view that shifts quite independently of the actual
position of the viewer, but which the viewer can imagine him-
self to occupy. A theatrical performance, obviously enough, has
no Wtrinsic poWt of VieW.6 Recognizing this, writers on theatre
with odour-producing scratch cards. Castle arranged for some of the theatres
showing his Tingler to give mild electric shocks to the audience at appropriate
moments during the program.
6 A theatrical performance may implicitly define a point of view by being
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staged to favour a certain viewing position. But this does not give it an in-
trinsic point of view in the strong sense that a movie has one.
7 Haig ]Khatchadourian "Space and Time in Film', p. 176. Italics in original.
s Bernard Williams, "Imagination and the Self", in Prob|ems af the Self: Philo
soPkiwi Papers, z95672, p. 35.
9 Walton, Mimesis as Make Believe, p 294. See also Wollheim, Painting as an Art,
chapter 2.
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mode of fiction of which the novel is the best example, and a con-
sequent elaboration of the showing-telling distinction. With vi-
sual fictions, we have a showing: we imagine that our act of
looking at the film, stage or picture is an act of looking at the fic-
tional events there portrayed. With poetry and its literary succes
sors we have not a showing but a telling: we imagine that the
events of the fiction occur, but not that our reading the text is an
act of witnessing those events. That way we have two kinds of
media, divided according to the kinds of representations they
employ, and two kinds of imagining; the proposal is that they
pair off neatly: pictorial fictions with imagining seeing, which is a
species of personal imagining and (predominantly) linguistic fic-
tions with impersonal imagining. All this, I say, is false.
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`2 Kendall Walton takes tNs view: when a fictional killing is shown on the
screen, it seems "to the viewer that he is seeing an adual killing via a pho
tographic film of it" ( Transparent Pidures", p. 258).
x> For forther wmments on the idea that the filming process arises from within
the diegesis itself, see Chapter 9, Section 9.2.
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`$ F~ [the viewer[ certamly has to identify ~ . , if he did not the film would
~ .
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of view as, in effect, "taking someones part' . This leads to unresolved ox-
ymorons like "identification asks us as spectators to be Isid two places at
once, where the camera is and "with" the depicted person. . . . This passage
Ifrom Stagecoachlshows that identification necessarily has a double structure
in the way it implicates the spectator in both the position of the one seeing
and the one seen" (p. 8). Simultaneous identification with distinct and indeed
antagonistic characters is hardly to be credited. But Browne's analysis is more
sophisticated than the inflexible "system of the suture against which he is
to some extent reacting.
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`B This shot, like most shots of its kind is quite unrealistic because it fails to
capture the binocular nature of ordinary vision. Ballantine would have to
have one eye shut to see anything like what is presented on the screen.
19 The shot may enwurage sewndary imagining. That is, in order to imagine
appropriately concerning the charader's experience, we may have to imagine
having that experience ourselves, thereby engaging in a simulation of the
character's experience (see Section 5.2 on the distinction between primary
and secondary imagining). But this secondary imagining is not a matter of
identifying ourselves with the character.
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would not have induced in you different beliefs about the shape
of the thing described.= Nor, with descriptions, do your beliefs
have the kind of bunched, contentspecific character we associ-
ate with perceptual beliefs. You can learn about shape from a
description, and learn nothing about colour. And what you can
learn from a description of colour will lack the specificity that
it would have in the case of a perceptual belief. Descriptions
rarely authorize us to believe the eyes of the person described
are exactly tI\!atshade of blue. The beliefs we get from descrip-
tions FD call mbolicbeliefs. They contrast, obviously, with per-
ceptual beliefs, but I am not claiming that between them these
two kinds exhaust the field.
This characterization of the difference between perceptual
and symbolic beliefs applies at the level of tokens rather than at
that of types. One cannot, in general, say that a certain belief
type - for example, that this object is round - is perceptual
rather than symbolic. One token of that belief might be percep
tual and another symbolic. What makes the token perceptual is
the form of its tokening - its tokenmg within a system of rep
resentation that gives to the tokens so represented the features
of structure and content I just mentioned. It should, for instance,
be a system in which size, shape and colour come together as a
single unit of representation. Pictures in the head would serve
well in this regard, but I assume we have independent reason
not to believe in them. No matter; other things may do as well,
induding connectionist networks with the right kinds of exci-
tatory links. But for purposes of this argument, I am neutral
about what kinds of representations are at work here.
Note that it would not do to characterize perceptual beliefs
by saying that they are the ones you get when you see the thing
itself rather than a description of it. For you can get genuinely
perceptual beliefs, in my sense, by looking at likenesses of
things; likenesses stand in the same or similar relations of coun-
terfactual dependence with your beDefs as do the things of
which they are likenesses, and the beliefs they induce have the
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') See Andre Bazin, Jun Renoir; see also N1 Carroll, PhilosophicalProblemsof
ClassicalFilm Theory, pter 3.
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us as less natural than those taken at roughly eye level. But the
best explanation for this sense of unnaturalness might not be
that we find it unnatural to imagine ourselves in the position
from which the shot is taken. A plausible alternative explanation
is simply that we are unfamiliar with the views of people that
such shots present, together with the fact that facial expressions
are usually so important to the narrative that shots which wil-
fully deny us access to them are very noticeable interventions
on the maker s part. And if unnaturalness were a function of
the extent to which the camera's position deviated from the
norm for a human participant, some shots ought to seem very
unnatural which do not seem unnatural at alI. Those views of
the Earth from deep space that we see so often in science fiction
films do not seem especiaHy unnatural.
5. What, in that case, do we make of the venerable distinction
between diegesis and mimesis, between telling and showing? It
seems that on my view fictions of all kinds are diegetic; all are
experienced as something told. They differ only in the means
used for the telling: words in literature, moving images in cin-
ema This denial of a universally acknowledged distinction
looks like a problem for my theory.
Imply that my theory stiH aHows for the making of important
distinctions If aH fictions are tellings, there are still fictions
which tell by words, spoken and written, and there are fictions
which tell by showing, as cinema and other visual fictions do.
Also, there are fictions in which the telling is foregrounded, and
is therefore a salient part of the audience's unreflective experi-
ence of the fiction, and fictions in which the artifice of telling is
backgrounded, and easily forgotten. This pair of distinctions win
serve us at least as well as the traditional showing/telling dis
tinction.
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its own Imagen. That way, sound and colour wnstitute pro
gress towards the cinematic ideal rather than, as some critics
have daimed, degeneration from the purity of the original, silent
screen.
No doubt Bazin was right about sound and colour being pro-
gressive additions to the cinematic repertoire. But if what I have
been arguing for in this chapter is correct, we shouldn't base
this claim on the idea that progress in cinema is measured by
increments of realism. Realism, in Bazin's sense, is the fashion-
ing of more and more "Kfelike" re creations of the world as we
experience it through our senses. And the farther we go in this
direction the more and more tempting it is for us to participate
imaginatively in the fiction the medium presents; to imagine
that we really are there, seeing fictional things. I have argued
that we do not typically imagine any such thing when we see
films, and that it is just as well that we don't, since the attempt
to integrate our imagined presence within the mm world with
the events of the story would produce unnaturalness and even
paradox. But we can imagine a cinematic technology so lifelike
that it would become difficult for us not to imagine ourselves
seeing fictional things from within the fictional world; even the
crudest 3-D techniques, for example, have a startling tendency
to make us imagine ourselves in physical relations to events
onscreen. That threatens to undermine the interest of the die
gesis, by leaving the viewer absorbed in an attempt to orient
himself in an unfamiliar environment. Such technological ad-
vances as 3-D might be accretions of realism in Bazin's sense,
but in my view they would not be progress in cinema. Any
medium that wishes to create rich and rewarding fictions must
keep the observer at a distance. Realism and the distancing nec-
essary to discourage imagining seeing are two principles of cin-
ema which are in tension. We might learn a great deal about the
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6.8 PSYCHOLOGISM
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Chapter 7
Travels in narrative time
I had the impression [in ]e t'aime, ]e taimel of a sort
of eternal present. The hero relives his past, but when
he relives it we are with him, the film always takes
place in the present. There are absolutely no flash-
backs or anything like them.
Alain Resnaisl
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' "Anachrony' is Gerard Genette s term. See bis influential Narrati Discourse.
Genette's taxonomy is widely applied to cinema: see, e.g., Brian Henderson,
'Tense, Mood and Voice in Film (Notes after Genette)".
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vant to the question before us, which concerns only the rep-
resentation of the fiction itself. The question is whether the
presentness of the image represents the presentness, to the
viewer, of fictional events. There is nothing eccentric about this
decision to concentrate attention on the fictional: discussions of
tense in cinema normally focus on the relation between the nar-
rative order and the temporal order of the fictional events de
picfed. We do not count it as anachrony when shot Y, which
foHows shot X in the intended order of viewing, was filmed
before shot X. Rather, we count it as anachrony when shot Y
represents a fictional event whose 6ctional time of occurrence is
prior to that of X.
l3a1azs'Theory of the Earn,p. 120. See also, e-g., Jurij J-.ofman,5emio'ttcsof the
Cinema, p 77: 'fn every art which employs vision and iconic signs there is
only one possible artistic time - the present" 8afiizs seems to conflate the
view that images have only one tense - the present - with the view that they
"have no tenses" (ibid.). See also R Stephenson and J. R Debix, The Cinema
as Art, p 115: "Film has no tenses - past, present, or future. When we watch
a film, it is just something that is happening - JIolo'(emphasis in the originaf).
Some other advocates of the Claim of s are discussed and criticized
by Jarviein Pbilosolmyof the Film, pp. 12-19.
Introduction to the screenplay of Last Year at Ma ~rambad,p 1z; quoted in Joan
Dagle, 'Narrative Discourse in Film and Fiction: The Question of the Present
Tense". Similar views are occasionally expressed concerning literature: "Tfte
reader if he is engrossed in his reading translates all that happens from this
moment of (fictionall time onward into an imaginative present of his own
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the previous theory would have it. AH images, on this view, are
experienced as representing present events; it is just that what
constitutes the present for the viewer is imagined to change to
compensate for temporal shifts in the narrative. But in other
ways this theory is just as implausible as the last; I don't think
I imagine my own temporal position to shift when I view out-
ofsequence images on the screen. It might be daimed that this
kind of imagined shift takes place unconsciously. Perhaps. I
don't say there never are unconscious imaginings; on the con-
trary, I have emphasized that my identification of imagination
with simulation allows for unconscious imaginings in just the
same way that we allow for unconscious beliefs. But we must
not aHow the category of the unconscious to degenerate into an
automatic let-out clause for otherwise falsified psychological
hypotheses. When it comes to the hypothesis that the viewer of
anachrony imagines himself travelling in time, this is not
something that we consciously imagine, nor is it something that
prompting naturaHy brings to mind as part of our previously
unconscious imagining. The only evidence for these unconscious
imaginings seems to be that they are required in order to save
the Claim of Presentness from refutation.
Yet another way to defend the Claim of Presentness would
be to argue that flashforwards and flashbacks do not change the
presentness of the image: that the content of the image in an
anachronous sequence is always the content of a character's
present memory of, or premonition concerning an event located
elsewhere in time. In that case there would be no need for us to
imagine ourselves moving around in time, and no sense of un-
ease or dislocation on confronting such a sequence would be
expected.
I might raise awkward questions here about how it is that we
could imagine ourselves to be seeing the subjective mental states
of other people, which is what this proposal requires us to imag-
ine. Let us put these awkward questions aside. This view
amounts, strictly speaking to the abolition of anachrony, be
cause it would not aHow us to say that any story events are
presented out of their strict chronological order. What we nor-
mally can a flashback could not be said to present the event
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Dis 'cusslons
of anachrony in film seem often to presuppose that current mem-
ories and premonitions do constitute the material for anachrony. See, e.g.,
Stephenson and Debrix Cinemu as Art, especially p. 118. David Bordwell goes
even farther in this surely mistaken direction. He counts it as a case of the
narrative reordering of story time when a character in the story recounts a
story event, as long as that ad of recounting constitutes our source of infor-
mation about the event. See his Narration in the Fiction Film, p. 78. fhe re
wanting is itself a story event, presented in the narrative in the conventional
temporal order; that it is a recounting of an earlier story event makes for no
disruption of story time - otherwise there would be anachrony every time a
character gave the date of NS birth. (Genette makes the same mistake while
analysing a passage from Jan Santeuil, in Narrative Discourse, p. 38.)
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I have said that the best argument against the Claim of Pres-
entness is the difficulty of explaining anachrony. But it may
seem that the argument can be inverted: how can we explain
anachrony thout the Claim of Presentness? Temporal forward-
ness and backwardness seem to be notions that make sense only
in relation to the idea of tempora/ presence, something usuaHy
incorporated in definitions of the flashback, as in "a juncture
wrought between present and past' ."
The chaHenge is to make sense of the concepts of flashback
and flashforward without recourse to the (tensed) concepts of
presentness, pastness and futurity. It will be helpful at this point
to introduce a distinction between two kinds of temporal rela-
tions. This distinction was drawn by McTaggart, preparatory to
his argument that time is unreal. McTaggart s distinction,
which I am going to use, is independent of his larger sceptical
purpose, and what I shaH say will reaHy be independent of the
whole issue of the reality of time. The concepts I shall appeal to
in explaining anachrony are, it will turn out, concepts that
McTaggart thought were perfectly coherent; they are the un-
tensed temporal concepts. Whether or not these concepts on
their own and without the assistance of the notion of tense can
" Turin, Flashbacks in Film p. 1. Turim also quotes a similarly tensed account
of the flashback from t.e8lie ~Hafftwell
(T/le Filmsoer,s Companion, 3d ed.), who
calls it "a break in chronological narrative during which we are shown events
of past time which bear on the present situation".
'z See J. M. McTaggart, Ttle Nature of Existence,vol. 2, chapter 33" McTaggart
argued, rougNy, that the A-series involves a contradiction, that without it
there is no change, and without change there is no time. So there is no time.
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's On the distinction between objective and personal time see, e.g., David Lewis,
'Tbe Paradoxes of Tirne Travel" .
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`&[)(!!\f iCml Ike the split screen can present material simultaneously, but still the
temporal order is determhute - it is ~rrence.
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= Resnais's t Year at Marienbad and Deren's Meshes of the Afternoon are often
cited as examples of tliS.
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zs Here I agree with Christian Metz: "TfIe film is able to express space and time
relationships of some kind, but only anaphorically within the film it-
self . . . and not between the film and someone or something else" ("fhe Im-
personal Enunciation or the Site of Film", p. 756). But 1 am puzzled by
Metz's talk, here and elsewhere in the article, of anaphora and the related
concept of deixis, which I think he misapplies. At least I have found his
point hard to follow.
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bothered, could truly and at any time say "I am here now", just
as we can. So we can say: the space and time of cinematic fiction
is structurally like the space and time of the real world.
Imagination
Imagination
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Part III
Interpretation
Chapter 8
The interpretive problem
Even if we reject the thesis that creative interpretation
aims to discover some actual historical intention, the
concept of intention nevertheless provides the fo
structure for all interpretive claims. I mean that an
interpretation is by nature a report of a purpose.
R/d rn
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6 Thfs argument is a little too quick, at least for those of us who think that
mental events are actually causaHy inert; we think that they mimic relations
of causal dependence by supervening on causally efficacious states of the
brain. But information about mental states can count as causally relevant in-
formation even when those mental states are causally inefficacious. See Frank
Jackson and Philip Petfit, "Functionalism and Broad Content".
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The interpretiveproblem
Let us call the idea that the interpreter s task is to discover the
author's intended meaning for the text "Real Author Intention-
alism", or RAI. It will soon be apparent why I choose this name.
RAI is scarcely a popular option among theorists of criticism,
and some of the arguments against it are good ones. For one
thing RAI denies the gap between aspiraHon and performance,
making it impossible for the author to fail to tell the story he
intends to tell. The story he does tell is, according to RAI, just
the one he intended to ten, and it is consequently the job of the
interpreter to discover what his intentions were. But authors
can, and sometimes do, fan to tell the stories they intend to tell.
The author can think that enough has been said to indicate a
certain development of plot or character, and be mistaken, be
cause readers cannot reasonably be expected to grasp that de
velopment on the basis of the text he gives them. In that case
the story he intends to tell is not, in at least some respect, the
story he tells.
Defenders of RAI sometimes claim that the author s inten-
tions to which we may legitimately appeal are not merely pri-
vate mental occurrences, but bodied intentions: intentions
which could be understood by a suitably receptive reader on the
basis of a reading of the text, and without access to information
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`s "As can be made of it' because it is not always possible to avoid imputing
some degree of authorial incompetence and textual incoherence. The dis
sepant reporting of Natasha's age in War and Peace could be reconciled by
assuming Tolstoy intended us to infer that she is a time traveUer, but that
would clash with the conclusion, welf'supported by other aspects of the
work, that no fantasy or science fiction elements are intended in this story.
IAI demands only that we maximize wherence.
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Having admitted that the real author s intentions are not deci-
sive for interpretation, why insist that the interpreter s task is to
construct another, this time hypothetical, author? Why not say
instead that the interpretive problem is simply to go from what
is explicit in the text to what is implicit, where what is implicit
might not correspond to anything anyone intended? But there
can be no meaning implicit in the words and sentences of the
text itself; the meaning that there is in the text itself is all explicit,
literal meaning. What we call implicit in the text is what we
think of as intended (perhaps, indeed, unconsciously intended)
by an agent who hopes to convey by his words more than the
words themselves literaHy mean. A text can encourage in the
reader s mind beliefs about what those intentions were even
when, as a matter of fact, the real author had no such intentions.
IAI says that it is what the text makes it reasonable to believe
was intended, and not what actuaHy was intended, that deter-
mines the content of the story.
There is another reason we can't ignore intention. Narratives
obstruct, mislead and manipulate us by their selective presen-
tation of events. But no text, no sequence of visual images, can
do those things; such thmgs require agency. Most of the ways
we describe narrative make no sense if we cut narrative off from
the agency which produced it. Writers on narrative sometimes
ignore this. Thus David Bordwell, speaking of film:
As for the implied author, this construct adds nothing to our
understanding of filrnic narration. No trait we could assign to
an implied author of a film could not more simply be ascribed
to the narration itself: it sometimes suppresses information, it
often restricts our knowledge, it generates curiosity, it creates
a tone, and so on. To give every film a narrator or implied
author is to indulge in an anthropomorphic fiction. . . .
lFilmicl narration is better understood as the organization of
a set of cues for the construction of a story. This presupposes
a perceiver, but not any sender, of a message.`6
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'7 Some 'wnterson the psychology of narrative have emphasized the impor-
tance of socalled schemata for interpretation: knowledge structures which
encapsulate a set of standard conditions pertaining to a given situation (air
travel restaurant dming etc.) and wNch we use to fill in the details of the
story from the sketchy outline of the text (see, e.g., }. M. Mandler Sto7'fa,
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relevant to deciding the issue, they can find nothing that tips
the balance either way. But still, Fred and Freida should not be
represented as disagreeing about everything in the interpreta-
tion of that story. Their rival interpretations may, and probably
will, have a significant common part. Things in that common
part, or some of them, may be uncontroversial; they win belong
to any interpretation of the story which hopes to withstand crit-
ical scrutiny. Thus they agree that Flora and Miles are children,
that Mrs Gross is real and not a figment of the governesss imag-
ination. (Or rather, they agree that all these things are fictional.)
And perhaps every well-informed and reflective critic will agree
with them. Those things which constitute the common core of
any acceptable interpretation ought to count as true if anything
does. In ~that case it win be straightforwardly true that it is fic
tional that Miles and Flora are chHdren. Similarly, claims which
no well-informed, reflective interpreter would offer - that Mrs
Gross is imaginary - will count as false. In general, an interpre
tive daim is true if it belongs to every maximal interpretation
of the text, and false if it belongs to no such interpretation. That
way the uncontroversial and the hopeless interpretive claims
(Hamlet was human, Hamlet was Venusian) come out true and
false respectively, while the controversial claims lack truth
value, for they belong to some maximal interpretations and not
to others.2o And where there is - if there ever is - one maximal
(and therefore best) interpretation, it comes out true, since all its
constituents come out true.
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Interpretation starts with the text and succeeds to the extent that
it explains the text as the outcome of story-telling intentions. It
seems, then, that the model here proposed fails for cinema
which, as I have argued, lacks a language.
But the nonexistence of a language of mm should not lead us
to abandon our basic model of interpretation as causal-inten-
tional explanation. Conventional, textual meaning is where we
start in interpreting the literary work, not where we end. We
end with a system of inferred intentions. Intentions can be in-
ferred from artefacts of all kinds, not just from linguistic ones.
Anthropologists infer intentions from the artefacts they discover;
that is, they infer the uses intended for them by their makers.
A film is an artefact, consisting of cinematic images and their
verbal and other accompaniments - a highly complex, struc-
tured artefact. Usually, its context of production is familiar to
us; we live in, or near, the culture that produces the films. So
making a stab at the relevant intentions based on a viewing of
the artefactual material itself ought not to be so very difficult.
In fact, I claim, we do it all the time. We may do it in ways
rather different from the ways we interpret literary works, but
the basic strategy is the same; to work out the story the film
presents by inferring story-telling intentions from the images or
other clues that the film gives us.
What we need is something that will play the same, or a
similar, role for the interpretation of mm that the literal mean-
ings of words and sentences play for literary interpretation. That
thing, whatever it turns out to be, will be the thing which needs
explaining in causal-intentional terms if we are to interpret the
film. It will be our evidential base, as the text is our evidential
base for literary interpretation. Of course we want, if possible,
for our base to be richly structured and have fine gradations of
texture. After all, our task is to mfer a large and complex set of
very precisely specified intentions; the more complex the evi-
dential base, the more likely it is that we shaH be successful
in this. IdeaHy, we should Eke to be able to say that our eviden-
tial base consists of elements which have meaning or content,
of some kind: if we start with meaning we shaH be more like
ly to end up with meaning. With texts, we start with literal
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2' In hoth cases - the fillnic and the Bnguistic - the order of production can
have consequences for what is implicated, in Grice,s sense.
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It does not follow from the view I have been advocating that
we should look for, still less that we should expect to find, a
common implied author for all of Hitchcock's films, another for
all of Douglas Sirk's. (Also, it doesn't follow that we shouldn't;
my point is that these issues are independent) It does not even
follow that we should expect to find, for every film, an inter-
pretive hypothesis that attributes story-telling intentions to a
single implied maker; a film, and indeed a fictional work of any
kind, can be such that it seems to be the product of more than
one agent, in which case we must speak of "implied makers".
The film may be such that these implied makers seem to have
shared or even communal intentions, or it may be that they
seem to have intentions that to some extent diverge and even
conflict. Intentionalism, as long as it is Implied Author Inten-
tionalism, is neutral on issues raised by the auteur theory.
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Chapter 9
Interpretation
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belongs within the world of the story, just as Julius Caesar and
I belong to the same world (the actual world), even though what
I teH you about him I know only through hearsay.
The reader trying to figure out what happens in this story
now has two voices to attend to: the (implied) author s and the
narrator s. The authorial voice may not be explicitly signalled,
but readers are aware of its presence if they know that what
they are reading is fiction, because fictions have to be thought
of as works produced with certain intentions. Sensitive readers
may be able to spot a tension between these two voices, the
authorial and the narratorial. The narrator insists that there are
ghosts. But why has the author made this a story in which no
one else, apparently, sees or has knowledge of them? These and
like clues suggest that, perhaps, the author s intentions concern-
ing the story conflict with the narrator's certainties. But in such
a conflict the author always wins. Author and narrator do not
speak with the same authority. The narrator, within the world
of the story, is a mere reporter of events, and a fallible one like
all such reporters. The author, standing outside the story, is not
conveying to the audience a set of possibly erroneous beliefs
about the story world; the author makes things be true in that
story world (makes things "be ficfional", as I say) simply by
decree or stipulation. If we as readers find it reasonable to infer
that the author intended that there not be any ghosts in the
story, then we must conclude that there simply aren't any. So
narrators are unreliable when their claims contradict the inferred
intentions of the author. This view of narrative unreliability, or
something broadly like it, is widely accepted. It is expressed in
a summarizing remark of Wayne Booth's: "I have called a nar-
rator re/iab/e when he speaks for or acts in accordance with the
norms of the work (which is to say, the implied authors norms),
unreliable when he does nOt."4 That, roughly, is how it is in
later (or because of the operation of magic, if thats how things are in the
story) is of no moment to his being a character. There is a distinction here,
but it is best understood as that based on epistemic proximity to the action,
and it admits of degrees. It is of no special relevance to our present concerns.
4 booth, eton-c of Fiction, pp. 158159, emphasis in the original One mislead-
ing feature of this remark is the implication that narrative unreliability is
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tional that he or she is the source of the text before us. We know,
of course, that the text is fictional and we probably know the
identity of its real author, but we may think that it is part of the
fiction itself that the narrator is the source of this text, and accept
the fiction's implicit or explicit invitation to imagine exactly that.
In this sense, Watson is a controHing narrator of the Holmes
stories, and to some extent an unreliable one in the sense of
Booth.8 But some narrators are embedded rather than controlling
Where there is an embedded narrator,the text we read tells us
of someone's telling, but that teHeris not, fiction&Hy,responsible
for the text we read. Rather,it is fictional that the text we read
reI:)ortsthat person's telling.9 Embedded narrators are common
in film: think of all those conflicting accounts in sbomon,the
bits of Charles Kane's life told by various folk in Citizm Kane
and Walter Neff's disillusioned narrative in DoubleIndemnity.
Now this distinction between controlling and embedded nar-
rators is very important for understanding narration in film.
There are embedded narrators in film: I've just mentioned some
examples of them. But there is something awkward - indeed,
something close to incoherence - about the idea of a controlling
narrator in film. With literature it is often natural to imagine
that what one is reading is a true account of certain events wit-
nessed or otherwise known about by someone, who then went
to the trouble of setting it all down for us in writing; some of
John Buchan's adventure stories, we are to imagine, are the
product of a careful editor who has heard from the parties con-
cerned and has created a judicious account on paper from their
F. K Stanzel supposes that all "first-person" narrators (in my terms: internal
narrators) are necessarily unreliable, because of the limitations on their knowl-
edge CA T12eory Narrative, p. 89). But failure to be omniscient is one thing
and failure to be reliable another. Perhaps the thought here is that a non-
omnisdent narrator wuld not be certain of the truth of any of his beliefs. But
it is an error of the Cartesian tradition to suppose that lack of certainty trans-
lates into unreliability.
The term "embedded narrator is sometimes used to refer to any character-
narrator. This strikes me as ~misleading usage; a character narrator who is
controlling in my sense is not necessarily embedded in the story. He tells the
story, but he does not tell of his own telling. See, e g., Wallace Martin, mt
Thmries of Narrative, p. 135.
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"` I agree with Christian Metz that "the explicit enunciators in the Rhn are
always embedded' (Metz, "The tropersonal Enunciation", p. 768).
', Wilson, Narra in Light.
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of the film have done; generations of critics and lay viewers have
accepted the view that Eddie is an innocent victim. But there
does not seem to be any embedded narrator in the film to whom
unreliability might be described. And, given the film's dramatic
structure, it is not easy to come up with a covert embedded nar-
rator of any plausibility.~
I am not entirely convinced by Wilson's interpretation, but it
does mesh well with parts of the film which are otherwise hard
to understand. And if Wilson's interpretation does not apply in
all detail to Lang s film, it is not difficult to imagine a film,
different from Lang s in minor ways, to which it does. So we
may conclude that it is possible for there to be unreliable narra-
tion in film where no embedded narrator is present - and when
it comes to definitions, possible counterexamples are as telling
as actual ones. In that case we really will have to look for an-
other definition of narrative unreliability if we are to accom-
modate You Only Live Once and like cases. Anyway, I shall
assume, for the sake of the argument, that Wilson is right about
the film.
So You Only Live Once is an unreliable narrative without an
unreliable narratOr.14What, then, is the source of its unreliability,
if not the tension between author and embedded narrator? Un-
reliability can have its source, I claim, in a certain kind of ccm-
p/ex intention on the part of the implied author. I-.ef me explain.
An agent can do something with an intention of the following
complex kind: she creates or presents something which she in-
tends to be taken as evidence of her intentions, and she intends
that a superficial grasp of that evidence will suggest that her
intention was F, whereas a better, more reflective grasp of the
" Perhaps you think it analytic that narrative must have a narrator (as does
Sarah Kozloff: Because narrative films are nanative, someone must be nar-
rating '; /noisible Storytellers, p. 115 quoted approvingly in Chatman, Corning
to Terms, p. 133). But then you simply object to my terminology, and I could
avoid the objection by using another term to refer to the vehide of narrator..
less story-telling. Consider it done.
~ As Cary Groner pointed out, An Occurrence at Ou I Creek (1961) seems to be
a case of unreliability without a narrator. But here the unreliability is tem-
porary; that the film's images are largely the imagmings of a character is
made evident at the end
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1$ In that case we have a ',seductive ' unreliable narrator. Tho classic case is
Tlie Tum of the Scre'v. Where Sooth's definition applies and mine does not,
we have an unseducHve one. See James Phelan, "]Narrative I)iscourse, Ut=
erary Character and Ideology ', in idem, Reading People, Reading Plots, p. 137.
Sometimes cases of unobviously unreliable narratives are described as "am-
biguous" (e.g., by Shlomith Rimmon=Kman, Narrative Fiction, p. 103), but I
wish to use this term for another purpose. See Section 9.4.
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from the nonsignificant causes and effects. My pmposal can be read as doing
that.
'7 See my "Interpretation and Objectivity".
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Note that You Only Live Once is, on Wilson's account, both
ambiguous and unreliable. At first the question "Is Eddie guilty
of murder?" seems to be answered by the narrative. But we see,
on closer inspection, that it is left open by it. That also seems to
me the best case that can be made on behalf of a psychological
interpretation of The Tum ofthe ScreW: reflection doesn't show
that there are no ghosts; at best it shows that another hypothesis
does about as well as the supernatural one when it comes to
explaining the teXt.'8 In that case might there be some internal
connection between unreliability and ambiguity?
Complex unreliability does not necessitate ambiguity. But
complex unreliability is an easier effect to achieve when it in-
volves ambiguity than when it does not. The task of the maker
of a complex-unreliable narration is difficult. It is to set clues at
two levels: at level 1, where the clues are more obvious but only
superficiaHy persuasive; and at level 2, where they are less ob-
vious but more weighty when reflected upon. But the degree of
difficulty of the task varies from case to case, and one deter-
minant of it is what we might call the epistemic distance between
the two levels: increase the distance and you increase the diffi-
culty. By "distance" I mean the disparity between what you
want to convey at a first impression and what you want the
audience to grasp on further reflection. The greater the distance
in this sense, the greater the subtlety and complexity of the rea-
soning the audience will have to go through to cover the gap,
and the less likely it is that they will succeed. Trying to raise
the probability of success in such a case by reinforcing the dues
at level 2 may simply undermine the whole project by making
the inference to level 2 more obvious and natural than that to
level 1.
`6 Jack Clayton's T/ze /nnocents a film version of T//e Turn of the Screw, is inter-
esting in this regard. One difficulty the film makers had to wntend with was
that a significant proportion of the film's audience would bring with them
their knowledge of the unreliability in James's story, which would make it
impossible for the Rim to achieve the same effect; the audience would be
primed for the discovery of the higher-level clues from the start. As I un-
derstand the film, their solution, intelligently enough, was to forgo any at-
tempt at complex unreliability and to settle for ambiguity.
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Bibliography
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Bibliography
2 96
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Index
2 97
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Index
c.mematic movement as apparent but film, and controlling narrator,
1-16;
nonif[usory, 42-46; the reality of, 34- 266 268; documentary/fiction 14-16;
42 engendering cognitive illusion, 22-23,
CiH2enKane (Welles), 14, 181, 266 27; engendering perceptual illusion,
Cohen, T., 58n z930, 35, 39; and `nnagining
colour: and cinematic image, 33; and someone s visual experience, 193-
film, 67; the reality of, 31-32, 39- 196; and impersonal nnagining 179
40 180; and personal imagining 165-
Como}}f, J.-L.,26n, 116n 179; realism 19-22, 106-108; and
Constable, J., 52 seeing the world, 48 69; as spatial
Cooper, N., xxi art, 103106v 218 219; as ternal
Corba}fis, M. C., 123n art, 96, 991o3v 218219; unlike
Couva}isv G., xxi, 21n language, 114 127124 128 1317 134-
Cmssffre (Dmytryk), 205 135; see a/so photography
Cullcden (Weir), 173 Fish S., 126n
F}itterman, S., 27n
Dagle, J., 2OOn Fodorv J. A., 29n Sln, 8586, 87n
Davies M., xxi-xxii, 53n Ford, F. M, 265, 278n
Davies, W. M., 29n 59n 64n Freud, S., xxiv
Dawkins, R., 59 Friedberg A., xviiin
Dayan D., xixn 194
Debrfx,J. R., 2oon Galileo, G., um
Deffenbacher, K., 46n Genette, G., 94n, 199n 204n 212nv
Del_euze, G., 141n 2o1n; on mm and 262nv 263n
physics xviii-xix G'1l)nflan D., 46n 86n
Dennett, D., 3738, 84n Glymore, C., xvn
Deren M , 214n G{xffather,The, Pa 2 (Coppola), 216n
Descartes R., 83 Goldman, A. I., 143nv 153n
Dick, B. F., 216n Gombrich, E., xvi
Dickens C., 229 Gone th the Wiml (Fleming), 14 273-
Dombey aml Son (Dickens), 228 274
Don't Noto (Roeg), 216 Gooa Soler, (Ford), 265
Dostoyevsky, F., 244-245 Goodman, N., xvi, 12n
Double Imlemnity (Wilder), 216n, 266 Gopnikv A., 143n
Durgnat, R., xviin Gordon R. M, 143n 154n
Dworkin R., 225, 249n GosFe/ Acwnfing to St. Matthem, The
(Passolini), 99
Eco, U., 117n, 131-133 Grant, C., 23, 38, 40 41, 48, 189
EiSensteWy S. y 104 GreatEtations (Lean), 181
elh'psis, 212, 215, 220; in }iterfnre, 219 Gregory, R., xvi
222 Grice, P., 127n, 215nv 253n
Ellfs,J.,22n Groner, C., 59n
2 98
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Index
Hanmn G., 132n knowledge of other minds xv, 142146,
Harris P. L., 163n 15o 158 161
Hartline, P., 64n Kozloff, S., 269n
Harvey, N., 163n
Haugeland, J., 84n LaCan,}.y XiV, .XVlis
XiX, 141
Heal, J., xxi, 143n La f!!'from Shanghai, The (Welles), 128
Henderson B., xviin, 199n 129
Hms, D., xxi Lang F., 131, 268
Hirsch, E. D., 244n Lapsley, R, urn
Hitchcoc A., 52, 153, 170, 174 1 76 , Lardner, R., 232-233, 270271
189, 195, 259, 267 Las/ gear at Man.enhad (Resnais), 101-
Holton R., 43n 102, 214n
HopLinss R, xxi Latorence of Amhia (Lean), 5
Hudson, W., Hon le Poidevin, R., 207n
Humphreys G. W., 89n Leslie, A., 142n 143n, 157n, 161n
Hunt, 1., 'xxn Levinson, }., xxii, 37n 92n, lOln 174n
Lewis, D. K., 'xxn,
53n, 55n 66n,. on
'nmgination, 141-142; and belief and anachrony and time travel, 208209;
desire, 151; perceptual and symbolic, on convention, 121; on flaSh-
184; personal and impersonal 166; as stoclunan problem 158-159; on time
simulation, 144-147, 149-.150 155- in fiction 211
161 Lippi, F., 9596, 99
/ncredMe Shring Man, The (Arnold), Livingston P., xxii
103 Lotman }., 11 In 2oon
/nnocen The (Clayton), z16n 276n Lundere Brothers, 24
interpretation: 226, 247-249; and Lycan, W. G., 84n
appearance meaning 255-25& Lyons,}., 117n
indeterminacy in and truth, z50251;
and interpretive differences, 227-228; M (Lang), 131
literary, 237-242; narrative, 228, 230 Malebranche, N., 62-63, 65
235; and real/implied author, 243- Malinas, G., 'xxli
246, z58-'259; and utterance meaning Mandler,}~ M., 248n
255-258 Marr, D., 69n 85n
/noasion the Bcdy Snatchers, The Martin E., 55n 57n
(Siegel), 186 Martin, W., 266n
Irwin, T., lam Mast, G., 3n, 4n, loln Zorn
Islufmro, K, 265 Maynard, P., 5on 76n
McTaggart,J. E, 206 207
Jadoon, F., xxii, 36n, 182n 240n Medlin, B., 42n
James H., 234 240 Mellor, D. H , 'xxn,l9Sn
}arvie, 1., 23n 58n, 2O0n Mendilow, A. A., 2o1n
}eannerod, M., 163n MeShesthe Afternoon (Daren), 214n
Johnson, C. N., 163n Met C., xvi xviin, XiXny 24n, 26n 27n,
Jones R. K., Ilon 110 116n, 119n, 175n, 218n, 262n,
Juhl, P. D., 245n 268n
Miller, G., 190
Kanner, LS 157n MillfLan, R. G., 53n
Khatchad'ounan, H., 34n, 169 Mitty, J., 165-166, 168
Kitcher, P., xxii Moreno, J., 167n
2 99
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Index
Mulvey, L., xixn Prince, G", 265n
MOnsterberg H., xxiif, 34 Profane Friendship (Brodkey), 154n
psychoanalyais, xii, xiv, xv, xix 27, 165,
Nabokov, V., 238 174-175
narrator, 262-263; controlling and Pudovkin, V., 19on
embedded, 265-266; reliable, 264; Pylyshyn, Z., 29, 87n
unreliable, 237238 240, 264; and
unreliable narration 260-262, 265, Rafelson R., 21 2n
268-270 Rashomon (Kurosawa), 266 z75
Nehamas A., 245n Ray, R B., 220
Nerlich G., xxii 38n Rear Window (Hitchcock), 52
Newman, E., 64n Rei K., 190
Nichols, S., 143n Remains the Day, The (IshiSuro),
North by Northwest (Hitchcock), 189-190 265
Renoir, }., 187
Occurrence at Owl Cr An (Enriw), representation 49; automorphic and
z69n homomorphic, 97-'98; linSuisffc, xvi-
Ogle, P., loSn xvii 7-B, 113-137, 181-185, 189190,
z51-258; v`Isual and pictorial 7-.8;
paintmg. as representational medium 1012
and art, 49, 51, 53-55, 61, 71, 77--78; Resnais, A., xviii, 198 214n 267n
and temporality, 95-'96, 99 Rey, G., xxii
Panofsky, E., 23, 166, 168 171, 178 Riddoch, J. M., 89n
Passolini, P. P., 99 Rnnmon-Kenan S., 271n
Peacocke, C. A. B., 29n, 64n RobbeGrillet, A., xviii, 200
Peepfng Tom (Powell), 267268 Robinson, }., 245n
Perkins, V., 164 zoln Rosen, G., xxii
Perner, }., 142n 157n Roth, D., 157n
Petftfo, L A., 116n Rules the Game, The (Renoir), 187
Petterson, A., 161n
Pettit, P., `xxn,
3m, 240n Saint, E M., 189
Phelan, J.,271n Sartwell C., SSn, 131n
Phelps, K. E., 163n Saussure, F., xxiii
photography; as representational Savage Rumbaugh S., 123n
medium 12-13, 51, 71, 77; and Scfder, F., Son, 83n H, 131n
seeing the world, 48, 50-51, 53-56, Scruton, R., 5on, 7274 75n 13on
63.-64 6668, 70 Searchers,The (Ford), z57
Piaget, J., 115n seeing 53, 55, 57; egocentric and
Piattellf-Palmarini M., 115n temporally extended information
picturos: and perceptual imagining from, 6668; and light, 59; and
184-185, 197; and representation, natural dependence, 616z; paintings
xvii, 80-81, 84.-87 and photographs, 5362; and
Pigden, C., xx" uninterrupted transmission, 6o, 70
Pi Flamingos (Waters), 167n semiotics, xvi-xvii, 116117, 165
Pitcher, G., lSzn Sesonske, A., 2O1n
Popper, K., xvi Sharp, R., xxii
Poussin, N., 95 Silverman, K., xvn
Premack, D., lion 123n simulation: and belief /desire, 149151;
Price, A. xxii and fiction, 152-155; and
37
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irna-SmaHon 14148, 151-152; and intentions of implied author, z7o
interpretation 242-243; and other 272
minds 144-147
Sirk D., z59 Velleman J. D., 31n 39n 11 In
Skow, J., 154n Venmzen B., 245n
Snyder, J., 5on Vertigo (Hitchcock), 170 171
Sobchack, V., xviii visual perception, xv; as nonlfnguisffc,
Sober, E., xxn 136..137
Sol1 I., "xxn Vygotsky, L. S., 161
Sorensen R., 146...I47
Sparshott, F., 34 2Oln Walton K., xxif, 13n 24n, 147n, 152n
SPe{{hound(Hitchcock), 174-175, 179... 161n 169n, 177n IHn; on
ISO transparency, 20, 5051, 55n 56n
s, R., xxn 57n 613, 75n, 173n
Stage Fright (Hitchcock), 195, 267-268 Wages of Fear, The (Clou2ot), loon
Stageco0ch(Ford), 175-176 War and Peace (Tolstoy), 246n
Stalnaker, R., 78n Warburton N., 66n
Stampe, D.,7Sn Waters, J.,88 167
Stan2el, F. K, z66n Weir, P., 173
Sternberg M., zoon Weiss, P., 23n
Stich, S., 143n Welles, O., lo
Stokes J., xxn Wellman H. M., 145n
structuralism: errors of, 114-116, 122n; Westlake, M., um
and narrative intentions, zz79 Wetherall P., xxH
Studier, G., 141n White, M., 46n
Sturgeon, S., xxn Whyte, J., xxii, 149n
Wilder, B., 216n
Taylor, K., xxfi Wilensky, R., 113n
TJ[i!ey
Shoot Horses, Don't They? Williams, Rs 169, 178
(Pollack), 216n Williamson T., xxif
Third Man, The (Reed), Io11 Wilson G., xiiin; on cinematic images
Thompson K, 274n as unlike language, 128...130; on
Tingler, The (Castle), 168 imaSfning seeing 165n 166, 171-173s
Todorov, T., 115 178; on unreliability, 2269, 276,
Tolstoy, L., 246n 278n
TornJones(Fielding), 262 Wilnmer, H., I42n 157n
Tooley, M., xxH Wittgenstein, L., 97, 123n, 136
Townsend, A., xxn Wollheim, R., H, 90, Ilon 141, l69n
Turim, M C., zzn l9Sn zo6n Woodruff, G., 11 on
Tum of the S , The (James), 232, 2 38 , Woolley, J. D., 163n
240, 250251, 261-262, 276...277
Yalowit2, S., xxii
unreliable narrative 261-262, 265; You Only Live Once (Lang), 268-27o,
Booth, 268-z70; in terms of complex z75-277
301