The moving image: the aesthetics of loss and solace in the modern mourning film

Authors

  • Richard Armstrong

Keywords:

bereavement, film, representation, mourning, narrative

Abstract

Abstract

Bereavement and mourning frequently occur as subjects in fiction and poetry. This paper, based on a larger piece of research, explores mourning as it is articulated in film. Starting with an overview of literary and cinematic representations of loss through the 20th and into the 21st century, it uses the 2008 film Genova as a case study, demonstrating both how this particular film depicts grief in the context of the psychoanalytic and bereavement literature, and how the medium's particular qualities are especially suited to depict the bereavement experience. Cinema, it argues, may itself offer a powerful therapeutic means for the bereaved to explore their own experience.

References

Armstrong, RT, Charity, LH and Winter, J. 2007. The rough guide to film, London: Penguin/Rough Guides.

Davis, C. 2007. Haunted subjects: deconstruction, psychoanalysis and the return of the dead, London: Palgrave/Macmillan.

Duncan G 2009 . Grief and grieving – a personal testimonial . Unpublished [available from the author] .

Dyregrov, A. 2008. Grief in children: a handbook for adults, London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Kübler-Ross, E. 2003. On death and dying, London: Routledge.

Lake, T. 1988. Living with grief, London: Sheldon.

Parkes, CM. 1998. Bereavement: studies of grief in adult life, London: Penguin.

The Quietus 2009 . Available at: thequietus.com/articles/01375-genova (accessed 24 May 2011) .

Wilson, E. 2003. Cinema's missing children, London: Wallflower.

Worden, W. 1991. Grief counselling and grief therapy: a handbook for the mental health practitioner, London: Routledge.

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Published

2012-04-01

Issue

Section

Bereavement In The Arts