Vers une image symptomatique : Don DeLillo et la crise de l’évidence
Florian Tréguer
Among the various concepts of image in DeLillo’s fiction, this study investigates what it problematically defines as the evident image (in its industrial forms: photography, television, video). Its symptomatic qualities (impact, denotation, expressiveness) make it a sharp instrument for questioning the characters’ dealings with signs and confronting them with their fascination for truer than life representations. On account of its essential elusiveness, it is also limitative: it upsets perceptual habits and destabilizes language insofar as it becomes incapable of grasping experience. To go beyond this stage of critical recognition, the character/viewer regularly attempts to deconstruct the image, isolate its element of obviousness, through compulsive manipulations (of which repeating, freezing and enlarging are three exemplary forms).
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Underworld ou quand l’image fait symptôme
• La vidéo comme regard encodé de l’autre
• Le fantasme de la vidéo-évidence
• Par-delà l’évidence : trois états déconstruits de l’image
— L’usure de la répétition (Libra)
— L’épreuve de l’arrêt (Mao II)
— L’effet de l’agrandissement (Underworld)
• OUVRAGES CITÉS