This article examines Michael Haneke’s 2005 film Cache ́ and its treatment of the October 1961 massacre in light of recent scholarship about memory and trauma. It argues that the film demands of its viewers a complex, critical position, requiring us not merely to passively re-witness the traumatising events of 17 October, but to take on as spectators a more active role in the work of remembering. The article examines narrative and visual elements in the film in order to demonstrate how Cache ́ illustrates and questions how film and other media forms contribute to the working through of collective trauma and, in so doing, function as potential ‘sites of memory’. Cet article examine le film Cache ́ (2005) de Michael Haneke et son traitement d...
Michael Hanekeʼs 2005 film Caché (Hidden) reversed a racialised gaze: the whiteFrench bourgeoisie ar...
This thesis is an examination of the influence of cultural representations of history in shaping a n...
© 2012 Cassandra J. LovejoyAsking the question, ‘How can we articulate the conditions that make poss...
“…What is denied or repressed in a lapse of memory does not disappear; it returns in a transformed, ...
This article analyses the depiction of the Algerian War in French and Algerian cinema, making use of...
This article analyses the depiction of the Algerian War in French and Algerian cinema, making use of...
This paper discusses the role of collective amnesia in France’s national identity, dealing particula...
The article is centred on the relationship between visual imaginary and testimonies, the way the for...
The two central themes in the films of Michael Haneke, the fragmentation and brutality of interperso...
The often nostalgically reconstructed and diverse city of Oran, Algeria, is also the site of horrifi...
Zohra Drif, a heroine of the Front de Libération Nationale's independence movement during the Algeri...
This article considers the figure of Majid in Michael Haneke's Caché (2005) and the cinematic struct...
The 17th October 1961 police massacre of hundreds of protesting Algerians in the centre of Paris has...
The article discusses cinematic representations of memory and trauma in post-Yugoslav documentary an...
This article examines the reticence of French film to engage with the Second World War combat film a...
Michael Hanekeʼs 2005 film Caché (Hidden) reversed a racialised gaze: the whiteFrench bourgeoisie ar...
This thesis is an examination of the influence of cultural representations of history in shaping a n...
© 2012 Cassandra J. LovejoyAsking the question, ‘How can we articulate the conditions that make poss...
“…What is denied or repressed in a lapse of memory does not disappear; it returns in a transformed, ...
This article analyses the depiction of the Algerian War in French and Algerian cinema, making use of...
This article analyses the depiction of the Algerian War in French and Algerian cinema, making use of...
This paper discusses the role of collective amnesia in France’s national identity, dealing particula...
The article is centred on the relationship between visual imaginary and testimonies, the way the for...
The two central themes in the films of Michael Haneke, the fragmentation and brutality of interperso...
The often nostalgically reconstructed and diverse city of Oran, Algeria, is also the site of horrifi...
Zohra Drif, a heroine of the Front de Libération Nationale's independence movement during the Algeri...
This article considers the figure of Majid in Michael Haneke's Caché (2005) and the cinematic struct...
The 17th October 1961 police massacre of hundreds of protesting Algerians in the centre of Paris has...
The article discusses cinematic representations of memory and trauma in post-Yugoslav documentary an...
This article examines the reticence of French film to engage with the Second World War combat film a...
Michael Hanekeʼs 2005 film Caché (Hidden) reversed a racialised gaze: the whiteFrench bourgeoisie ar...
This thesis is an examination of the influence of cultural representations of history in shaping a n...
© 2012 Cassandra J. LovejoyAsking the question, ‘How can we articulate the conditions that make poss...