Metaphor, Metonymy and Metalepsis: Tree Tropes in Contemporary Slovak Documentary
Metaphor, Metonymy and Metalepsis: Tree Tropes in Contemporary Slovak Documentary
Author(s): Mária FerenčuhováSubject(s): Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Film / Cinema / Cinematography
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: Slovak contemporary documentary; theory of meaning; rhetoric of documentary; figures and tropes; metaphor; metalepsis;
Summary/Abstract: This paper presents the films of three Slovak contemporary documentary filmmakers of the younger generation from a rhetorical and poetic perspective. Through their authorial films, Peter Kerekes, Marko Skop and Juraj Lehotsky call into question the widespread conception of documentary as recorded reality. Meanwhile, Peter Kerekes uses metaphor in a sophisticated way to structure his film Cooking History (2009), and presents various analogies between war and food, and cooking and historiography, Marko Skop uses more subtle figures to creatively treat the actuality. In Osadne, uses spatial metaphors and a large number of symbols to represent the small Slovak village of Osadne within the European Union. He also transforms a seemingly linear narration into a thread of analepses and prolepses. Finally, Juraj Lehotsky in his Blind Loves involves fiction in actuality, by representing his own ideas of blind peoples’ visions and fantasies, creating a metaleptical documentary chronotope. In accordance with George Lakoff and Mark Johnson’s cognitive theory of meaning, the paper presents metaphor, but also other figures and tropes as means that help to understand one kind of experience in terms of another kind of experience. At the same time, the paper demonstrates that metaphorical, but also metonymical and meta- leptical thinking by the filmmaker transforms recorded reality and provides a new, personal outlook on the world - an outlook that the spectator can not only understand, but sometimes even adopt.
Journal: Images. The International Journal of European Film, Performing Arts and Audiovisual Communication
- Issue Year: 15/2014
- Issue No: 24
- Page Range: 27-40
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English