TY - JOUR
T1 - "As nameless as a flower"
T2 - The exhaustions and excesses of outliving in Ganja & Hess
AU - Bell, Kevin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Johns Hopkins University Press and SubStance, Inc.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This essay links two 20th-century writer/intellectuals whose pairing might appear improbable. But the regions shared by French literary critic Maurice Blanchot and Black American filmmaker Bill Gunn emerge through each figure's concern with the obsessional image that shows "interiority"to be a "gravity, "always oriented outward; and therefore, lapsed or subjected in relation to itself. My investigation's object is Gunn's 1973 film Ganja & Hess. Conceived by its corporate producers as a "blaxploitation/vampire"vehicle, it becomes instead Gunn's unofficial Cannes triumph; it is, for one venerated critic, "the most complicated, intriguing, subtle, sophisticated and passionate Black film of the 70s."
AB - This essay links two 20th-century writer/intellectuals whose pairing might appear improbable. But the regions shared by French literary critic Maurice Blanchot and Black American filmmaker Bill Gunn emerge through each figure's concern with the obsessional image that shows "interiority"to be a "gravity, "always oriented outward; and therefore, lapsed or subjected in relation to itself. My investigation's object is Gunn's 1973 film Ganja & Hess. Conceived by its corporate producers as a "blaxploitation/vampire"vehicle, it becomes instead Gunn's unofficial Cannes triumph; it is, for one venerated critic, "the most complicated, intriguing, subtle, sophisticated and passionate Black film of the 70s."
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U2 - 10.1353/sub.2021.0019
DO - 10.1353/sub.2021.0019
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85114036318
SN - 0049-2426
VL - 50
SP - 79
EP - 101
JO - Sub-Stance
JF - Sub-Stance
IS - 2
ER -