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Popular Culture and Identity-- Ethnic, National and Personal Calendar by Atom Egoyan.

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Presentation on theme: "Popular Culture and Identity-- Ethnic, National and Personal Calendar by Atom Egoyan."— Presentation transcript:

1 Popular Culture and Identity-- Ethnic, National and Personal Calendar by Atom Egoyan

2 Outline Introduction  Egoyan and ArmeniaEgoyan  Calendar and ArmeniaCalendar Text Analysis  Questions Questions  Calendar vs. Three Cultural PositionsThree Cultural Positions  Photographs and Videos –”Fortress” of Identity–”Fortress” of Identity  Trauma and Responses –1. Defense; 2. Openness; 3. Silence; 4. Ritual of Healing. Openness; 3. SilenceRitual of Healing  The Ending and Boundaries of Different KindsEndingBoundaries

3 Atom Egoyan: Films with Armenian Connections Of Armenian descent, Born in Cairo, raised in BC, Canada. Next of Kin (1984) : A bored young Canadian, while receiving experimental "video therapy", discovers tapes of an Armenian family who are missing a son. The young man assumes the identity of the long-lost boy, and is readily adopted by this new "family". The Adjuster (1991) : There are two sisters from Armenia who have to burn pictures of the past and forget about them. The other films:  displacement in a city, dysfunction of families, rituals of remembering and survival, etc.

4 Atom Egoyan, Calendar & Ararat Calendar (1993) – personal and yet fictitious—focused on three persons; historic images. Budget: only 8,000 US dollars. Ararat (2002)-- “Home”-coming in two senses: 1. 1) Making a “Canadian” film after the two international projects: Felicia’s Journey (shot in Britain and Ireland, 1999); Krapp’s Last Tape (Beckett on Film series); 2) dealing with a crucial part of Armenian history. 2. More ‘personally’ and emotionally embodied, less cerebral.

5 Calendar An Armenian-Canadian photographer gets estranged from his wife, who is closer to Armenian culture, during their trip to Armenia, and then, back in Toronto, he needs to find a way to face this sad memory. Main Components & Products of Popular Culture:  12 calendar images  put back in “his-story.”  3 characters  positions: knowing a place through living there, interacting with people there, and thru’ photo-taking and asking questions. (Language as a medium or obstacle)  2 plotlines  1) Photo-taking + video-recording; 2) video-watching, answering machine, songs, “dating”(?)

6 Armenia – not just churches Before their visit:  For Egoyan – just calendar images.  For Arsinee – great civilization. Electricity and gasoline rare, guerilla and political upheaval.

7 Calendar: Basic Questions What do you think about the three characters (the photographer, the guide and the photographer’s wife)? What has happened to the three of them? e.g. chap 3 What do you think of the women in the present time? Why do they keep making phone calls in foreign languages? e.g. beginning of chap 9

8 Calendar vs. Three Cultural Positions Calendar – photography as an art form, a commodity for propaganda to attract tourists, for daily consumption to mark the passing of time. Photographer– artistically involved, emotionally and culturally alienated.  stays behind the camera all the time;  cares a lot about the photo qualities. (asks the two to step aside for him to take photos.)

9 Calendar vs. Three Cultural Positions (2) Photographer–Watches the development of his wife’s involvement with the guide, and becomes defensive. e.g.  Chap 5: watches his wife’s body;  chap 6: 23:05 –2 mins and 54 secs; chap 6 – confrontation 1—asks if he wants more money; Chap 7: 34:30; 35-45 – defensive and lonely; chap 11 –asks what his intentions are.)

10 Calendar vs. Three Cultural Positions (2) Wife: emotionally involved with both and with the land, invites the photographer.  e.g. running with the flock of sheep; chap 9: sings with a group of shepherd, talks a lot with the guide Guide: a nativist introducing and protecting his culture  Asks if he should do more research, if the place is just one of his projects Chap 7: 34:30; 35-45;  Thinks their children should come to Armenia -- chap 8  chap 9: not knowing all about history)

11 Photographs and Videos: “Fortress” of Identities & Memories 1. The photographer and his adoptive child – a photo and a video:  Chap 8  44:44: What do you think? Is he a good father? Is he using her?  Photo and Video –a form of caring, but not an intimate kind.  Uses her as a spy. Welcomes her to Canada when it is not quite possible.

12 Photographs and Videos: “Fortress” of Identities & Memories Images: Chap 5: 26:04 Chap 10 54:55 – 58 What do you think?  –protection  isolation  contrived and hurting.  Video wound back and forth –gain and loss repeated  An old man talking about the relics of the church. – a self- protection which is futile

13 Identity: Vulnerability & Silence Facing the man means allowing himself to be vulnerable. Chap 11: Passport and KGB agent –the photographer allows himself to be examined Failure of Communication

14 Dating as a Ritual of Healing Starting with an embarrassing one, then it becomes a self-imposed ritual Sexy foreign women (speaking in Arabic, Italian, German, Hebrew ) going to make a phone call upon the signal of wine-pouring.

15 From Lack of Communication To writing & “communication” (speaking to the women but not to his wife) Chap 10 – artificiality of the ritual exposed; Chap 11 -- You can put down the phone now; talks about his ethnic past and Canadian identity. Chap 12 – communication?

16 Identity and Boundaries


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