Living Dead Frogs & Acrobatic Flies: Survivances from the Past in the First Scientific Films

Authors

  • Maria Ida Bernabei Università degli Studi di Udine https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6132-9609

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2280-9481/12304

Keywords:

Visual Culture, Scientific Cinema, Popular Science, Remediation, Avant-garde

Abstract

 

Crossing centuries Lives in a drop of water, Anguillulae Aceti and Fresh-water Hydras; living dead frogs, ten feet tall fleas and well-trained flies; bow-tied chemists, barker-like scientists and Scientia… a whole popular science series that borrows the name from a luna park stand. In aiming at the objective visualization of a pure phenomenon, scientific film is supposed to be free from any history, any tradition, any (linguistic) heritage, any intertextuality. It is surprising to find out that it is not always true. By the “instructive amusement” imperative which first popular science series borrowed from Positivism, it seems then to get the grips with some survivances of dusty fairground stands, of maravigliosi optical games, of evolving cabinets de physique. Can scientific film show how cinema has remediated its ancestors? Can it teach us something about the unsuspected love of the 1920s avant-garde for the past, about their “dialectical” tension?

 

 

 

References

Amberg (1972): George Amberg (a cura di), The Film Society Programmes, 1925-1939, New York, Arno Press, 1972, pp. 97-98.

Bachelard (1993): Gaston Bachelard, La poetica dello spazio (1952), Dedalo, Bari, 1993, p. 137.

Baker (1754): Henry Baker, Le microscope à la portée de tout le monde, Paris 1754, p. XII.

Balthazard, De Pastre e Lefebvre (2012): Magalie Balthazard, Béatrice De Pastre e Thierry Lefebvre, Filmer la science, comprendre la vie. Le cinéma de Jean Comandon, Paris, CNC, 2012.

Benjamin (2009): Walter Benjamin, Sul concetto di storia, a cura di Gianfranco Bonola e Michele Ranchetti, Torino, Einaudi, 2009.

Benjamin (2010): Walter Benjamin, I passages di Parigi [H 5, 1], ed. it. a cura di Enrico Ganni, Torino, Einaudi, 2010.

Benjamin (2012): Walter Benjamin: Aura e choc. Saggi sulla teoria dei media, a cura di A. Pinotti e A. Somaini, Torino, Einaudi, 2012, pp. 17-49.

Bertetto e Pesenti Campagnoni (1997): Paolo Bertetto e Donata Pesenti Campagnoni, La magia dell’immagine. Macchine e spettacoli prima dei Lumière nelle collezioni del Museo nazionale del cinema, Milano, Electa, 1997.

Boon (2008): Timothy Boon, Films of fact. A history of science in documentary films and television, London, Wallflower Press, 2008, p. 12.

Brik (1926): Osip Brik, What the eyes does not see, “Sovetskoe kino” n. 2, 1926, ora in Liz Wells (eds.), The photograpy reader, London-New York, Routledge, 2003, pp. 90-91.

Cavalletti 2011: Andrea Cavalletti, Suggestione. Potenza e limiti del fascino politico, Torino, Bollati Boringhieri, 2011.

Claretie (1896): Léo Claretie, “La Revue enciclopédique”, n. 154, 28 marzo 1896, p. 50.

Claude (1913): Georges Claude, Liquid Air, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Philadelphia, Blakiston’s & Co., 1913.

Comandon (1932): Jean Comandon, Le cinématographe et les sciences de la nature, in Henri Fescourt (a cura di), Le cinéma des origines à nos jours, Paris, Éd. Du Cygne, 1932.

Delmeulle (2003): Frédéric Delmeulle, Contribution à l’histoire du cinéma documentaire en France. Le cas de l’encyclopédie Gaumont, 1909-1929, Villeneuve d’Ascq, PUS, 2003.

Dickson (1895): William Kennedy Laurie Dickson e Antonia Dickson, History Of The Kinetograph, Kinetoscope And Kinetophonograph, New York, Albert Bunn, 1895.

Didi-Huberman (2006): L’immagine insepolta. Aby Warburg, la memoria dei fantasmi e la storia dell’arte, (2002), trad. it. Alessandro Serra, Torino, Bollati Boringhieri, 2006.

Didi-Huberman (2007): Georges Didi-Huberman, Storia dell’arte e anacronismo delle immagini (2000), trad it. di Stefano Chiodi, Torino, Bollati Boringhieri, 2007.

Epstein (1935): Jean Epstein, Photogénie de l’impondérable (1935), ora in id., Écrits sur le cinéma, 1921-1953. Edition chronologique en deux volumes, vol. I, Paris, Seghers, 1974.

Epstein (1946): Jean Epstein, L’intelligence d’une machine (1946), ora in id., Écrits sur le cinéma, 1921-1953. Edition chronologique en deux volumes, vol. I, Paris, Seghers, 1974.

Gaycken (2015): Oliver Gaycken, Devices of Curiosity. Early Cinema & Popular Science, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015.

Gombrich (1970): Ernst H. Gombrich, Aby Warburg. Una biografia intellettuale (1970), a cura di Alessandro Dal Lago e Pier Aldo Rovatti, Milano, Feltrinelli, 1983.

Haeckel (1900): Ernst Haeckel, Kunstformen der Natur, Leipzig und Wien Bibliographisches Institut, 1900.

Kahn (2002): Pierre Kahn, La leçon de choses. Naissance de l’enseignement des sciences à l’école primaire, Villeneuve-d’Ascq, Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2002.

Lefebvre (1993): Thierry Lefebvre La produzione Scientia (1911-1914). La divulgazione scientifica attraverso le immagini, “Griffithiana”, n. 47, 1993, pp. 136-155.

Lefebvre (1997): Thierry Lefebvre, Le film scientifique et son auteur. Autour du procès Doyen / Parnaland (1905) in Anja Franceschetti, Leonardo Quaresima (a cura di), Prima dell’autore. Spettacolo cinematografico, testo, autorialità dalle origini agli anni Trenta, Edizioni Forum, Udine, 1997, pp. 205-209.

Mannoni e Pesenti Campagnoni (2009): Laurent Mannoni, Donata Pesenti Campagnoni, Lanterne magique et film peint. 400 ans de cinéma, Paris, La cinémathèque française, 2009.

Martin (1763): Benjamin Martin, The young gentleman and lady’s philosophy, London, 1763.

Martinet (1994): Alexis Martinet (a cura di), Le cinéma et la science, Paris, CNRS, 1994.

Michaud (2012): Philippe-Alain Michaud, Aby Warburg et l’image en mouvement, Paris, Macula, 2012.

Moigno (1872): François Moigno, L’art des projections par M. l’abbé Moigno, Les Mondes, Gauther-Villars, Paris, 1872.

Thévenard e Tassel (1948): Pierre Thévenard e Guy Tassel, Le cinéma scientifique français, Paris, La Jeune Parque, 1948.

Sadoul (1949): Georges Sadoul, Histoire du cinéma mondial. Des origines à nos jours, Paris, Flammarion, 1949, p. 49.

Schwartz (2020): Peter J. Schwartz, Aby Warburg and Cinema, Revisited, “New German Critique”, 47, 139, 2020, pp. 105-140.

Ter Braak (1928): Menno Ter Braak, Onze tiende matinee, trad. it. in Francesco Bono, Alberto Boschi, Elfi Reiter (a cura di), La Filmliga olandese (1927-1933). Avanguardia, critica, organizzazione del cinema, catalogo delle Giornate internazionali di studio e documentazione sul cinema, Bologna, 1991, pp. 134-35.

Tissandier (1882): Gastone Tissandier, Le ricreazioni scientifiche ovvero l’insegnamento con i giuochi, Milano, Treves, 1882.

Tosi (1979): Virgilio Tosi, Il Pioniere Roberto Omegna (1846-1948), “Bianco & Nero”, a. 15, n. 3, maggio-giugno 1979, pp. 3-70.

Tosi (2007): Virgilio Tosi, Il cinema prima del cinema, Milano, Il Castoro, 2007.

Zoboli (1913): L. A. Zoboli, Nova Lux!, “La Rivista Cinema-Docet” t. II, n. 8, 1913, p. 2.

Zucconi (2013): Francesco Zucconi, La sopravvivenza delle immagini nel cinema. Archivio, montaggio, intermedialità, Milano-Udine, Mimesis, 2013.

Published

2021-08-04

How to Cite

Bernabei, M. I. (2021). Living Dead Frogs & Acrobatic Flies: Survivances from the Past in the First Scientific Films: . Cinergie – Il Cinema E Le Altre Arti, 10(19), 171–189. https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2280-9481/12304

Issue

Section

Miscellanea