Film Favorites: Losing Ground

When artist Victor (Bill Gunn) convinces his wife Sara (Seret Scott) to adjourn to an upstate idyll for the summer, he has in mind a pastoral image of personal rejuvenation. While Sara agrees, this form of escape is far different from the hermetic, principled solitude she seeks to work on her summer research while on sabbatical from her yearly teaching engagements as a New York City philosophy professor. The contrast between Sara’s Apollonian formalism and Victor’s Dionysian overflow is immediately apparent in Kathleen Collins’s Losing Ground, but it is as quickly foiled. While Sara initially appears standoffish and aloof in the manner of an impartial academic, her self-governed demeanor soon reveals a roving spirit, a mind as unquiet as it is carefully controlled, and as passionate, in as many registers, as her husband, even though she works overtime to transpose her irritations into a more analytic idiom. She is presently researching an essay or two on the philosophical discourse of “ecstatic experience,” which obviously disappoints her actress mother Leila (Billie Allen), who resonates more with Victor’s emotional vision-quest. But Collins’s screenplay is supple enough to offer the characters as both abstract typologies and living humans, already a category-confounding suggestion that the modes of experience the couple seem to live by are, in fact, fluid guidelines for organizing everyday experience rather than strict regimens that must be upheld. Without denying Victor’s interest in ecstasy, Collins also catches Victor’s subtle arrogance and dismissive celebration of emotion over philosophy, recognizing that his impatience with Sara’s analytical abstraction is also its own conceptual flattening, just as Sara’s mental enclosure, despite her skepticism about emotion, attempts its own mode of ecstatic transcendence.

Neither character finds their attempts consummatory. Each encounters another than troubles their assumptions. Victor becomes infatuated with Celia Cruz (Maritza Rivera), an ostensible muse whose bodily presence disrupts his stated desire to search for “pure” abstract form and escape the prison of representational art. Gunn understands that Victor’s elated demeanor is tinged with frustration and confusion about the kind of art that channels the hypostasized idea of “purity” he is suddenly so invested in, just as Scott intuits that Sara’s ostensibly analytic demeanor belies her searching curiosity and disappointment. While she flirts with fellow academic Duke (Duane Jones), whose enigmatic demeanor seems to combine academia and bohemia, his capacity to fulfill her seems equally up in the air.

Kathleen Collins’ script, among the first written and directed by an African American for commercial release in the United States, is framed via frustrated attempts at communication, both apparent connections that give way to difference and presumed discrepancies that imply similitude. Celia, despite her burgeoning friendship with Victor, understands everyday existence in a way that he doesn’t, and she speaks with what she calls an “American” rhythm of speech that he seems aloof to. Despite Victor’s interest in her, he still exerts a self-conscious superiority of his own explanatory ability: “if she doesn’t know Wedgewood, there’s no way I can explain it,” he remarks, signaling a gap between them that figures him as the arbiter of something like intuitive human knowledge who seems to reduce her to an object, to count himself as part of an artistic elect. This is a declaration of intuition on his part, but it’s also a judgement about the anointed of which he wishes to be a part.

Continue reading

Fragile Frontiers: Walker

The center of Alex Cox’s Walker is a ministerial hat and enigmatic gait loosely adorning a void. It walks around, hero and victim of its own self-effacing aura, clearly considering itself both the herald of a new dawn and the scion of a long, unfurling divine edict. “What do you mean tactics?,” it self-certainly intones at one point, suggesting a preordained vision beyond the need for practical engagement. For it, the self is a force beyond finitude, mortality, even contingency, striding through a conflict while everyone around it is served up as cosmic grist. At one point, it shoots a guy into a coffin that seems to have been placed there by the divine set-hands of a filmmaker god. Narrating in the third person, it saunters around with a radiant aura that signals delusional tranquility masquerading as grace, suggesting that it is a functional non-character in a comic sketch about itself that it cannot recognize. It is a man working for “god, science, and hygiene,” a figure who turns self-abnegation into pure egotism as it stretches its soul over the American leviathan and, in doing so, thins itself into a vacuum, becoming one with the empty icon it understands itself to embody and represent.

“It” is our man of practical affairs, William Walker (Ed Harris), real life nineteenth century filibuster who lead a military effort to establish a US-backed government in Nicaragua and thereby extend imperial rule, and Manifest Destiny, Southward. Walker, in this film, wants his Nicaragua to be “whole and perfect and outside of time,” a miniature version of a dream America sanctioned by God as an idealist, transcendental paradise. When he stares at a carved Aztec statue at one point, he blankly looks into its eyes in search of a clear connection, assimilating its difference into his own self-portrait, colonizing its image in the name of his enigmatic, empty grandeur. He sees himself as beyond time – which is how he characterizes this statue with his eyes – but also as opaque and sublime – which is how he undoubtedly sees the indigenous empire he enigmatically views as both self and other. He wishes to impose, and to impose himself as, another exalted totem of American hubris devoid of particularity or resistance. In this world, everything can only be a facet of himself, lost fragments of his American ego ready for reincorporation into the maw of this monomaniacal Ahab.

Continue reading

Fragile Frontiers: Violent Saturday

Richard Fleischer is usually seen as a journeyman director of “tentpole” films, texts designed to hold up the dream cloth over the Hollywood machine, to keep the cinematic mechanism, and us, in partial darkness. He would become a staple of the machine for the muscular but oneiric 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, the phantasmagorical Fantastic Voyage, and the lurid, empathetic, and subtly radical Mandingo. Even his less eager-to-please films fit within the archetypes of their time-period, like thecruel, discomfiting The Boston Strangler echoing the rise of the New Hollywood and the terse Narrow Margin pushing low-budget noir to new heights of uncomfortably cramped enclosure.

Given his work as a stylist more than a formalist – his textured embroidery of screenplays rather than his perspectival exploration of them through his craft – it’s easy to forget him. Still, it wouldn’t be lying to say that the only film Fleischer made that really feels like it went out of its way to disfigure its own generic and stylistic convictions, rather than expand them (as in most of his films) or submerge them into an abyss (as in Boston Strangler), is 1955’s Violent Saturday. While Margin was a nasty, disfiguring geometry and Boston Strangler a dark, cloacal summoning of inner murder, Violent Saturday is eye-opening ecology turned into unforgiving velocity.It depicts a termite colony of a town, and this is a termetic work, in Manny Farber’s sense: exploring, infesting, rummaging in America’s forgotten corners. It moves sideways from person to person, but somehow forward as pure motion and kinesis through that continual waylaying. Its narrative rhythms manage to be associative but also inexorable, as though crawling toward a necessary, tragic, final logic that unites everyone here and breaks them apart, visualizing a nation that enacts many forms of violence, often minor and infrastructural, and that believes that a bigger, more visible, more insisting violence is the only thing that can shift a paradigm. This is a film that moves exhaustingly and fundamentally toward an ultimate showdown, yet it figures this not as a comeuppance or a consummation but a consolation for a country that hasn’t really figured out what it means to exist as humans together.

Violent Saturday suggests violence’s connective thread most explicitly in the final image, where executive Shelley Martin (Victor Mature) seems, through his impromptu heroism against several bank robbers, to overcome his son’s frustration at his not having been called to romantic duty in WWII. In its final moment, Violent Saturday exposes the nation’s psychic obsession with masculine valor and renewal through violence, implying that the nation needed the crime at the center of the film even as it must condemn the men who enact it. Violence here is fatalistically preordained. Someone has to commit violence at home for this man to have his day in the sun. The narrative machinery of the nation demands it, and the country will find an event to fulfill its needs somewhere.

But has the country learned anything, or is this mid-century violence coming home just the chickens coming home to roost? Martin is not the protagonist. Indeed, the film quietly undercuts his moment by presenting it as one among three equal revelations. Shelley saves the day and is, perhaps, a town hero, just as another man reveals to a nurse that he has spied on her undressing, and just as another man quietly breaks down over the death of his wife, speaking to the same nurse, who loves him. Maybe he actually loves her too. This feels like three variations – “romance, comedy, tragedy” in order – but the tone is subtly deflationary and decidedly stone-faced. These three extensions of the final confrontation in the film are presented without comment, given equal narrative weight in a film that is quietly tabulating results it cannot fully understand, treating them matter-of-factly as essentially the same, as three tremors of nuclear fallout in a Southwestern town just realizing a bomb has been blowing up, around the world, for decades and maybe only just hit them. How, the film asks in the act of not choosing, would we weigh these three results, these three epilogues, and can this nation weigh them honestly? Which is the “right” conclusion in a film with so many characters, so many tones?

This is a film that is deeply interested in both systems of relation and systems of stasis that lower the human to a mere force, an instrumental actor in a wider world in which we are all agents and all often, albeit incompletely, pre-determined. At one point, two men discuss a women dancing with a man. “She moves like a Swiss watch,” one man says, to which another man responds “watch it son, go easy or you’ll get train sick.” These two people have been rendered machinery, and she a landscape. The two men watching are winding the scene up to work for their amusement, but they are also stilled as mere observers of a moving display. Who is in motion, and who is still? Who is preparing the path for future events, and who is enacting them?

The apparent instigators of the titular violence – two of whom are the watchers in this scene – are Harper (Stephen McNally) who arrives in town posing as a salesman, Dill (Lee Marvin), who is nursing an addiction, and Chapman (J. Carroll Nash), who seems genuinely pleased to give some candy to a child despite his capacity for violence. The men arrive one by one, on time, all in a day’s work. None of them are especially excitable, or very passionate. They are professionals, formed forces exerting just enough energy to alter the state of the world around them. Machines in a clockwork, they work to get the job done.

But is that all they are? A wildly, unexpectedly intimate scene of Marvin and McNally discussing past romantic connections for a significant length of time leads to them witnessing Bank Manager Harry Reeves (Tommy Noonan) “casing the building.” Actually, he’s just innocently walking his dog. But, actually, he’s moving along to watch the aforementioned nurse Linda Sherman (Virginia Leith) undress in her window. Then he’s watching Elsie Braden (Sylvia Sidney), a librarian, drop a purse into a trashcan. Understanding that this indicates her disposing evidence, he and her come to a mutual decision to hold these crimes against one another if either tells. They all observe each other, only for the film to observe all this as simply more minutiae of the day. Here, the two criminals aren’t just cogs in a preordained mechanism, but fulcrums in a fluid artistic (and sociological) organism endlessly growing and adapting to its interests.

They watch, and he watches, and she watches him. The criminals, earlier, had watched Boyd Fairchild (Richard Egan) dancing with the nurse Linda Sherman (Virginia Leith), who loves him dearly (they’re the two dancing), only to demur because he (Boyd) genuinely loves his wife (Margaret Hayes), despite her own infidelity. He was “all-American negotiator at Princeton,” he says, but he seems unable to negotiate a story that he only knows a small portion of. That anyone here only knows a small portion of. Even though the two watchers will kill Boyd’s wife, he is unaware of them, and he will be even more unmoored when the death offers neither Linda nor Boyd the escape path they cannot find, any kind of way to unwind this tightly bound but slowly fragmenting tapestry that does not realize it is also a powder keg waiting to explode and that it is a marginal, mundane existence that will not really explode even when it seems to. Death will affect them all, but the town must continue on.

All of this is to say: we are watching a plan that works like clockwork, but it collapses like clockwork as well. The robbers’ is a machine-like glimpse onto a mechanical nation, but within it, we are constantly reminded, messy and slovenly human lives nonetheless tick, connecting in unexpected ways, engaging the complexity of determinism, chance, and agency with perhaps little conscious recognition that they are doing so. Tiny particles of emotion precipitate around a crime conducted like so much everyday business in the community. Like a Douglas Sirk forcefield tangled into a Robert Altman ribbon, in turn laminated by Samuel Fuller into a cold, distant atom, the film is a vision of the nation: deeply receptive to one another and yet disgracefully distant from anyone, piston-like yet adrift, still beginning but completely finished.  

Review: 10/10

Midnight Screenings: Smokey and the Bandit

It’s odd to feel like it needs to be said for a film that was, at its time of release, one of the five highest money earners (unadjusted for inflation) in US Box Office history, but Smokey and the Bandit really is one of the key texts of 1970s American cinema. Released in 1977, this is a film aware of, and blissfully ignorant about, the world it has entered into. Offering an innocently insubordinate but not very challenging vision of anti-authoritarian freedom and a celebration of mere personal charisma as a form of authentic rebellion, it is a text that is hopelessly inadequate to solve the problems of its environment. Beset on all sides by the neoliberal desecration of working-class solidarity, the desacralization of a particular American idiom of collective life rooted in an abiding belief in a contract between the public and its government, Smokey and the Bandit has little to offer to save the nation other than an irascibly impish vision of redemptive speed. It salvages hope via a zealous romance of energetic freedom, a libertarian insistence that the state only obstructs, and that its institutions are de facto illegitimate when they aren’t abusive. This is no image of leftist salvation. It isn’t a sustainable image of resistance. It isn’t what America needed, then or now. And yet…

Bandit is sticky. It gets all over you like, as the film says, maple syrup. Something about its empty evanescence makes it linger. Thematically, it’s basically a rewrite of It Happened One Night, another tonic for tough times about a perpetually smirking asshole of a protagonist and a runaway bride as a fellow traveler, a comedy not of remarriage – separation and reunion restored with a difference – but of survival, of getting by through pure guile. Co-writers James Lee Barrett, Charles Shyer, and Alan Mandel and director Hal Needham offer a vision not unlike Robert Riskin and Frank Capra’s: mostly without overt critique, but not without clear perspective. Six years before this film, Two Lane Black Top framed the highway as a void of existential emptiness, while, two years before that, Easy Rider metaphorized the finale of the 1960s as an apocalyptic cataclysm. Six years after this film, Paris, Texas would figure it as a dissociative fugue state, the rumination of a lost drifter unable to find a new future or to return to a stable past. Comparatively, Smokey and the Bandit revs up a path not forward or backward but outward through pure immanence. It kicks up so much dust that the timeline it is supposed to be looking for gets lost in the fray. The opening glimpses of the truck are less symbols of America than invitations to appreciate motion, the poesis of movement and minutiae for their own sake.

All in all, the film occupies a peculiar register of the American mind, a strangely aloof and blissful perpetual present-tense, a cotton-candy Americana of the eyes and the stomach. This is, of course, an image of the cinematic dream factory – as star Burt Reynolds says at one point, “It’s not a convoy, it’s a dream,” mechanical collectivity fused into human myth –  but the film quietly celebrates the various everyday people who have to work this desperate situation in this wayward country to produce the dream-machinery of Hollywood Americana. It isn’t going to save us, the film seems to know, but there is something decidedly worthwhile about its vision of a nation of nomads and itinerants, a convoy country that tucks you into a rocking chair safer than a “womb,” a fantasy that this is, after all, the birth, or potential rebirth, of a nation.

Continue reading

Midnight Screamings: The Mask (1961)

The Mask begins with a quintessential maneuver of the mid-century, an opening address from a man in a suit whose minor-key smirk and mix of self-importance and ease puts him somewhere between expert and huckster. The film conjures a phalanx of mid-century signifiers. A simulacrum of William Castle introduces us to the film’s world, laundering exploitation through the language of psychoanalysis and unsettling that very modern science by exposing its occult pre-history. He speaks of, and the film moves in, the primitivist and modernist language of masks as a metaphor for the subcutaneous, explosive violence and metabolic intuition lingering beneath the even temper of modern science. Is this man a scientist, practical man of affairs, a trickster, or a channeler of something more demonic? What, the film ponders, separates any of these from the others?

Masks abound in the film to which they bequeath a title, suffusing us in the intellectual miasma of mid-century thought. While the speaker professionalizes the film, The Mask poeticizes his language almost immediately with a cut to a woman’s screaming visage, then to a violent man’s assaulting face, two very different sorts of masks, expressive images exposing two consciousnesses locked in impossible conflict. What masks do they wear, and are they doomed to repeat themselves in an eternal cycle of fear and desire? The Mask offers another sonic bridge to a telephone, tethering the irrational to the technological, and suddenly we’re away from primitive ritual and into a sterile modernity already beginning to decay. Within a few shots, the film has already blurred science and mysticism and then linked swamp and skyscraper, plunging into the masks that modernity wears and then exposing the difficulty of defining a true face.

Continue reading

Midnight Screenings: Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41

In Shunya Ito’s Female Prisoner Scorpion: Jailhouse 41, the titular penitentiary is mental rather than only physical. Its protagonist Nami Matsushima (Meiko Kaji), mostly called Matsu, is on the run with six other women, all of whom carry the history of institutional oppression on their psyches. The mean-spirited Hide Oba (Kayoko Shiraishi), who oscillates between victim and tormentor, is both an embodiment of that trauma and a reflecting mirror who casts the shadows of social violence back onto the world that circumscribed her in the first place. The first Female Prisoner Scorpion film was a comparatively uncomplicated slab of B-movie mischief, one of the more observant “women in prison” films of its era but broadly willing to color within the outline of its accepted genre. Ito’s sequel is a hallucinogenic waking nightmare, a follow-up that doesn’t so much expand as implode the original film’s exploration of carceral hierarchies and societal exploitation. In breaking down the confines of its genre, replacing a physically oppressive enclosure with a universe rendered almost completely ajar, Jailhouse cracks open the assumptions of its genre. While it is still superficially a revenge narrative, Ito frames it as a nasty-minded descent into psychic disfigurement, a long night of the soul in which imprisonment is an imagined space as much as a physical one. Where, the film asks, do you run when the prison is inside you?

Continue reading

Midnight Screenings: Blast of Silence

The title doesn’t suffer any fools. This is a howl of cinematic nothingness, a pitilessly impotent roar. It’s a post-noir stripped to the wiry skeleton: no shadows, an open-air prison that hides things in plain sight. Allen Baron is the shaggiest of auteurs, a ramshackle one-man band who directs and writes a doom and then casts himself to wear it. He fashions himself as an icon figure of mid-century social disintegration that is nonetheless entirely integrated into himself, a man who is entirely cohesive, basically complete in himself, and yet essentially a void. He is a performer who is both a presence and an absence, a blank face that registers as an abyss moving through a land without shadows.

Contrast this with Orson Welles’ magisterial The Trial from the same year, the greatest Kafka adaptation in all of cinema. Welles may have been the surest hand and most preternatural eye ever to weaponize a movie camera, and his 1962 film is one of the great cinematic acts of abandonment, a brutal displacement of space-time in which reality folds in on itself as the modernist dream of productive experimentation and creative curiosity eat themselves alive. An amazing film, no doubt, one that formally turns the 20th century’s Promethean vision of progressive order into its own death spasm. Baron’s much less famous film is, in some sense, more frightening, a hell that masquerades not as the good – with its pretensions of order and stability – but the neutral. Blast of Silence is a film for what Daniel Bell called “the end of ideology”: visions of a better world – visions of the world –  have been discharged, and the characters are all just tenants moving from store to store in the remnants of a world that functions but does nothing more.

There’s nothing grand about Blast of Silence. It promises no withdrawal in the form of utopia, and it promises no exodus in the form of an apocalypse. There’s only a now, a flatline. This is not Welles’s modernist promise interred in its own abstract Kafkaesque geometry – an architecturalization of Charles Foster Kane’s own morbid ego and elephantine charisma – but an essentially banal world. No one in Blast has any plans, least of all those in power. There are no totalitarian overseers enforcing and justifying a state vision. This is a city that needs no excuse to murder. It arrives like a train, “right on schedule.” Murder is a “business.” And Blast of Silence is business-like in its severe austerity, a corrosive and unsettling meditation on modern alienation and spiritual ennui that hits like a bullet. No one here is an ideologue. They’re professionals. That is an ideology, of course, but they don’t need to know that, and they don’t need someone to hide it from them. It feels like the open-casket funeral for the traditional film noir, deflating its romantic fatalism and sinister glamour and exposing an apathetic world, a planar space. There’s nothing in the dark.

Continue reading

Fragile Frontiers: Terror in a Texas Town

The protagonist of Terror in a Texas Town is a sturdy, all-American sailor with a gigantic harpoon. He’s a worthwhile man, but the film’s soul is the film’s antagonist. We meet him as he sees himself: as a dark shadow passing over the screen, “death walking around in the shape of a man.” This is a torturous and dislocated film in which everyone is at odd angles to everyone else, a film that is fascinated with how people occupy space. But Johnny Crale (Nedrick Young), a self-hating mercenary  whose body is almost always in side profile, alone seems to recognize how he presents himself to the world.  When he speaks to others, he looks behind them or above them, never at them. He suggests a hesitance to meet the world directly, like he’s afraid of his own outline and can’t even acknowledge where he stands, how he might look in the mirror. His imagination is cynically circumscribed by capitalism: “As long as there are men like you,” he tells a rapacious robber baron, “there will always be work for men like me.” The film doesn’t insist on any of this. It exhibits such casual mastery, such economy of form. He begins the film passing in the foreground, facing away, moving from left to right as he passes over the camera, and over the film frame. This is the black hat of the traditional Western no longer as a mere villain or an antagonist to be felled or bemoaned but a moving abyss in which the film finds itself.

Crale is a fascinating figure here, a self-hating antagonist who, after shooting a man dead, shoots his corpse five more times, angry at the body for not accepting the status quo and for activating his capacity to be complicit in its perpetuation.  His violence reads as displaced impotence. He is a victim of a dehumanizing system incentivized to abstract responsibility and to turn his frustration onto others, to kill for people in power so that he does not have to reckon with the possibility that the system might be otherwise. When confronted with the death of his father, our quasi-protagonist George Hansen (Sterling Hayden) asks what kind of a country can condone a man dying and not asking any questions. Crale cynically remarks that, in this country, you can be sure he’ll get a pageant in lieu of an interrogation. The dead will be honored in America, but the causes of their death will never be seriously reckoned with.

Continue reading

Midnight Screenings: Bone

Larry Cohen is one of the great cinematic provocateurs, but Bone is one of his few films worthy of being considered genuinely troubling. Cohen’s films are intrepidly amusing and almost always mischievous with their grasp of truth, but Bone, his debut, tilts normality in a subtler, and ultimately, more forceful manner. In the image of married couple Bill (Andrew Duggan) and Bernadette (Joyce Van Patten) lounging outside by their pool, Bone frames a horridly bland image of bourgeois suburban domesticity. In the image of Yaphet Kotto (Bone) appearing out of nowhere, dressed like an escaped criminal and ready to move to a decidedly more banal prison. Lasciviously grabbing a rat out of the pool, he impishly winks  “you wanna touch it.” The sexual joke is funny, but Kotto’s wryly menacing eyes and shit-eating grin makes it truly uncomfortable in a way that, say, The Stuff simply isn’t, even when the characters are exploding into morasses of liquid sludge. Cohen’s screenplay is working at a higher level than The Stuff because it goes lower, right into modernity’s cloaca.

“Is there anything I can do for you all?,” Bone asks with playful gruesomeness that exposes him as a hilarious perversion of the “magical Negro” stereotype, the black man as cosmic force who intrudes on the normal order of things in order to reveal the middlebrow monotonies and manicured calculations of their bourgeois lives. Rather than salvation, though, the titular Bone offers destruction. He comes not to absolve them of their existence, but to corrode the strictures of their being, to filter their sanity through a prism of psychological erosion. He’s the existential specter they need, a cinematic wraith who emerges, as if out of the liminal undulations of a cinema of the id, the infested impurity of their pool itself, to clarify their fears and catalyze their anxieties. When Bill walks through the city on a mission from Bone, he passes a sign that says “new adult theatre open.” You said it, buddy.

Continue reading

Midnight Screamings: Burn, Witch, Burn

Burn, Witch, Burn, directed by Sidney Hayers and based loosely on Fritz Leiber’s novel Conjure Wife, follows Norman Taylor, a newly appointed psychology professor at a quaint British school whose professional identity rests entirely on self-confidently deconstructing irrational beliefs. An arbiter of post-enlightenment skepticism, he, and his subject position, necessitates that superstition be seen as a relic of primitive, pagan thinking. Taylor’s position reflects a characteristically mid-20th-century confidence in scientific rationalism, a worldview the film subtly interrogates as it evokes the early 1960s – a moment poised between postwar solidity and the creeping resurgence of countercultural forces. To those invested in the sanctified stability of mainstream forms, these new energies seemed to rekindle an occult past that had been only apparently foreclosed by the hegemony of rationalism.

In this film, however, these energies were only superficially dormant, less absent than silently constitutive of the very reason that Taylor grounds his identity in. An identity the film finally destabilizes, disfiguring Taylor’s self-enclosure by slowly exposing the protective influence of his wife Tansy. Her charms, written off by Taylor as trivial superstitions, ultimately prove entirely essential for maintaining the subterranean order beneath the internecine rivalries and bristling anxieties of the modern academic world, which claims that it thrives on order but can clearly not sustain itself without tensions and complexities it must superficially disavow.

When Taylor discovers these threats – in the form of his wife’s protective superstitious charms hidden throughout the house – he destroys them. His sense of self depends on this destruction, but this very act begins to scrap away the veneer of rational stability that had granted this practical man of mid-century academic affairs, and the social structures he represents, legitimacy. These seemingly irrational currents which he must deny are ultimately exposed as the hidden backbone of the system that must excise them to the margins in order to preserve its identity, revealing a science that is more vulnerable, and ultimately more fragmented, than it is willing to admit.

Continue reading