Noir Affect proposes a new understanding of noir as defined by negative affect. This new understanding emphasizes that noir is, first and foremost, an affective disposition rather than a specific cycle of films or novels associated with a given time period or national tradition. Instead, the essays in Noir Affect trace noir's negativity as it manifests in different national contexts from the United States to Mexico, France, and Japan and in a range of different media, including films, novels, video games, and manga.The forms of affect associated with noir are resolutely negative: These are narratives centered on loss, sadness, rage, shame, guilt, regret, anxiety, humiliation, resentment, resistance, and refusal. Moreover, noir often asks us to identify with those on the losing end of cultural narratives, especially the criminal, the lost, the compromised, the haunted, the unlucky, the cast-aside, and the erotically "perverse, " including those whose greatest erotic attachment is to death. Drawing on contemporary work in affect theory, while also re-orienting some of its core assumptions to address the resolutely negative affects narrated by noir, Noir Affect is invested in thinking through the material, bodily, social, and politicalâeconomic impact of the various forms noir affect takes.If much affect theory asks us to consider affect as a space of possibility and becoming, Noir Affect asks us to consider affect as also a site of repetition, dissolution, redundancy, unmaking, and decay. It also asks us to consider the way in which the affective dimensions of noir enable the staging of various forms of social antagonism, including those associated with racial, gendered, sexual, and economic inequality. Featuring an Afterword by the celebrated noir scholar Paula Rabinowitz and essays by an array of leading scholars, Noir Affect aims to fundamentally re-orient our understanding of noir.Contributors: Alexander Dunst, Sean Grattan, Peter Hitchcock, Justus Nieland, Andrew Pepper, Ignacio SĂĄnchez Prado, Brian Rejack, Pamela Thoma, Kirin Wachter-Grene
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Yes, you can access Noir Affect by Christopher Breu, Elizabeth A. Hatmaker, Christopher Breu,Elizabeth A. Hatmaker in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism Theory. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Toward Alphaville: Noir, Midcentury Communication, and the Management of Affect
Justus Nieland
In May 1968, the American conceptual artist Mel Bochner published a four-page artwork titled âAlfaville, Godardâs Apocalypseâ in Arts Magazine (fig. 1). At once a compressed movie review of the directorâs noir/science-fiction hybrid Alphaville (1965) and a collection of quotations aping Jean-Luc Godardâs own citational style, the piece takes the form of a typographic grid. Bochnerâs rationalized design nods to the ruthlessly technocratic world of Alphaville, governed by the omniscient computer Alpha 60, even as its layout scrambles the functionalist protocols of the medium (the magazine page) through which it communicates. Like Robert Smithson and Dan Graham, Bochnerâs work in the 1960s shared a preoccupation with discursivity and sought to intervene in the mediated scenes of informationâs distribution and display, folding strategies of dissemination into the production of the artwork itself. In adopting an aesthetic of information, 1960s conceptual art such as Bochnerâs assumed what Sianne Ngai calls the âlook of capitalist modernity itselfâânot just the look of thought, but of bureaucracy, of âpost-Fordist knowledge work.â1 The Godard of Alphaville was up to something similar.
In the United States, the rise of new communications technologies in the postwar âinformatingâ society was accompanied by a neutral, low-affect disposition that Alan Liu has dubbed âcool.â2 In âAlfavilleâ Bochner argues that the emotions of Godardâs noir hero, Lemmy Caution, betray something similar, ânothing more than a slightly roused boredom.â3 For this reason, Bochner continues, Lemmyâs âavowal of humanist values such as love and personal feeling are all the more disproportionate.â4 Bochnerâs own dispassionate, late-modernist grid is the appropriate technique for communicating that kind of permeant postindustrial boredom, which saturates the modern mise-en-scĂšne of Godardâs New Wave noir: âAlphaville locations: deserted lobbies, parking lots, shopping plazas, cloverleaf intersections, curtain-wall buildings, self-service elevators, hotel bathrooms, phone booths, circular staircases, highways around large cities, a bedroom with a jukebox.â5 Bochner identifies here precisely the kind of serial and anonymous spatiality characteristic of what Ed Dimendberg calls the decentralized, âcentrifugal spacesâ of the film noir in late modernity and their dispersed communication networks.6
In fact, beginning in the postwar period, noir affectâas a problem for managementâwas often inseparable from the information agendas of various organizations and embedded in period-specific understandings of communication and its media technologies. Dimendberg has observed the increasing presence of mass media in noir after 1949, noting the publication that year of Claude Shannon and Warren Weaverâs The Mathematical Theory of Communication and the construction of an early computer at the University of Illinoisâboth harbingers of the information age that would help to transform noir spatiality.9 I will argue that noir affectâs relationship to the managerial imperatives of midcentury communications theories and practices began even earlier, alongside wartime studies of propaganda (a term long synonymous with âinformationâ), and then accrued heightened scrutiny as a therapeutic idiom of communication flourished following the war. In the process, noir affect became bound to what Mark Greif has dubbed the midcenturyâs âcrisis of manâ discourse. This pervasive and anxious humanism arose in the historical shadow of fascism and totalitarianism and viewed the human being as beset by various forms of technics, from the machine to proliferating strategies of âwhat we might call âsocial technique,â organization, or simply government.â10 As a technical problem for organizations, and requiring expert management, noir affect thus intersected fitfully with what Greif identifies as various âsub-topicsâ underwriting âcrisis of manâ debates: âtotalitarianism, existentialism, world war, and Cold War propaganda ⊠human rights, and the United Nations.â11 Moving toward Alphaville as a late, French entry in the âcrisis of manâ discourse, this essay turns to the chronically maladjusted and negative terrain of noir affect to offer a brief history of the genreâs relationship with the organizational and managerial operations of the administered society that, for Godard, Bochner, and others seemed to force humanism to a terminal crisis by the late 1960s.
Film noirâs most famous memo, in Billy Wilderâs Double Indemnity (1944), is an early instance of the bureaucratization of noir affect and its organization within the managerial paradigms of midcentury communication (fig. 3). Walter Neffâs (Fred MacMurray) interoffice confession to his friend and coworker Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) is a now-iconic example of noirâs tendency to subjectivize narration through voiceover and flashbacks, amplifying generic affects of anxiety, unease, and disorientation. But Walterâs affect here seems rather coolâcooled not just by its hard-boiled tone of cynical retrospection but also its technological mediation. It is spoken into a Dictaphone and takes the form of an office memorandum, what John Guillory calls bureaucratic modernityâs âquintessential information genre.â12 The memorandum âgives directions, makes recommendations, but above all, it is means of transmitting information within the large bureaucratic structures organizing virtually all work in modernity.â13 The film opens by framing the affects most proper to Walterâhis sincere feelingsâwithin a communicative, organizational circuit. The scene of confession blurs with the scene of administration.
Figure 3. Walter Neffâs interoffice confession in Double Indemnity.
Much like Keyesâs âlittle man,â a kind of tireless emotional laborer deep inside, alerting him to phony insurance claims and protecting the corporate bottom line, Neffâs memo is a symptom of Double Indemnityâs investment in the modern management of feeling as both a technical and ideological matter within those bureaucratically managed systems constitutive of modernity, from insurance agencies to nation-states. As figures of the professional-managerial class, Keyes and Neff betray an emotional coldness typical of white-collar workers in a midcentury corporate culture that would be increasingly shaped by automation and new structures of bureaucratic control with designs on human emotion. Emotional life portrayed by middle-class workers like Keyes and Neff was, Liu claims, âall about âmanagement.â It was about managing the allowable range and intensity of productive affect, displacing excess affect into indirectly productive acts of consumption, and thus establishing the modern paradox of deadpan professionalism and binge leisure.â14 In Liuâs account, this was a legacy of Taylorism, âthe first rationalized system of emotional labor management,â whose scientific strategies sought to remove workplace antagonism between human laborers by absorbing it âinto a relationship with something one could safely hate (or mourn or love) with no practical effect at all: the technological/technical system.â15 In the work of Elton Mayo and others, hard Taylorist science led to softer managerial techniques for enforcing a norm of low affect in the workplace that were further refined in the 1920s and 1930s with the emergence of new fields of industrial psychology, âsalesman training (e.g., Dale Carnegie), personnel counseling, employee testing, and so on,â leading to the managerial revolution known as âhuman relationsâ or âhuman resourcesâ that gained steam in the 1930s.16 The goal of workplace relations rethought as human resource management was not just a Fordist affective âharmonyâ or alignment with technical system but what Liu calls a âresocialization of work under the name of systemic friendshipâ and the âidentificationâ of managers and professionals âwith the technological/technical system.â17 Walterâs ambivalent feelings for Keyes, relayed via memo, are a displaced form of his feelings for a vast technical system he both hates and loves. Ironically, he can only confess them within the confines of an informational genre devoted to securi...
Table of contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Half Title
Introduction: Dark Passages
1. Toward Alphaville: Noir, Midcentury Communication, and the Management of Affect
2. Public Violence as Private Pathology: Noir Affect in The End of a Primitive
3. Cold Kink: Race and Sex in the African American Underworld
4. Noir Pedagogy: The Problem of Student Masochism in the Classroom Economy
5. The Shadows of the Twilight World: Beebo Brinker and the Circulation of Affect