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ABSTRACT:
Germaine Dulac’s “integral cinema movement” of the 1920s and her
integral cinematic work, La Coquille et le Clergyman (1928), are
analyzed from a historical and theoretical perspective. Results suggest
an early introduction of integral consciousness into cinematic media
that corresponds to and predates the integral theories of both Jean Gebser and Ken Wilber. Defining characteristics of what may constitute
an integral cinematic work are mapped out and developed into a set of
evaluation criteria using the works of Dulac, Gebser, and Wilber. A test
of these evaluation criteria with the viewing of several motion pictures
is summarized; the results suggest that several past and recent films
demonstrate qualities that could be said to constitute an integral
cinematic work. A preliminary typology of forms of integral cinematic
creation, and the potential benefits and challenges for the application
of Integral Theory to cinematic theory and practice are presented and
discussed.
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Introduction
There
is a long tradition in the cinematic arts of applying advances in human
understanding to cinematic theory and practice. These applications,
including the adaptation of practical and theoretical approaches from
psychology, philosophy, history, linguistics, anthropology, art, the
physical and applied sciences, and cultural and social studies, have
helped to advance our understanding and appreciation of the cinema, and
have served to expand and deepen the technical and artistic capacity of
the cinematic medium (Andrew, 1976; Brady & Cohen, 2004). This capacity
for expansion has led to the ability to create more powerful and
effective cinematic realities with an increasing potential to influence,
in both negative and positive ways, human physiology, psychology,
culture, and society. This impact can be seen from the extreme physical
and emotional effects reportedly induced by films like
Psycho (Hitchcock et al., 1960),
The Exorcist
(Friedkin
& Blatty, 1973), and
Jaws
(Spielberg et al., 1975) to the cultural and
social influences of films like
The China Syndrome (Bridges et al.,
1979) and
An
Inconvenient Truth (Guggenheim, 2006) (Harrison, 1999;
Kaplan, 2005; McLuhan & Fiore, 1967; Nielson Company, 2007; Petric,
1973).
While the advances in cinematic theory
and practice have been valuable in many ways, “none of these approaches
appeared without controversy or has maintained its relevance without
polemic” (Brady & Cohen, 2004, p. xvi). Given the power and influence of
the medium, as well as the eclectic mix of sometimes conflicting,
complex, and controversial theories and practices, it is my belief that
the application of a metatheory to integrate the truths of these many
different approaches could advance our understanding and appreciation of
the cinematic medium, and bring us to a new level of technical and
artistic capacity. This article is a preliminary attempt to apply the
metatheory of
Integral Theory (Wilber, 1995) to cinematic media theory
and practice, and an initial exploration into the development of an
integral cinema.
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