Machinic Desires: Hans Bellmer’s Dolls and the Technological Uncanny in <i>Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence</i>

不可思议的 清白 艺术 德国的 壳体(结构) 艺术史 文学类 美学 哲学 精神分析 心理学 语言学 复合材料 材料科学
作者
Steven T. Brown
出处
期刊:Mechademia [University of Minnesota Press]
卷期号:3 (1): 222-253 被引量:12
标识
DOI:10.1353/mec.0.0088
摘要

Machinic Desires: Hans Bellmer’s Dolls and the Technological Uncanny in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence Steven T. Brown (bio) There are no human beings in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence. The characters are all human-shaped dolls. —Oshii Mamoru One of the most distinctive aspects of Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, Oshii Mamoru’s 2004 sequel to the highly acclaimed feature-length animation Ghost in the Shell (1995), is the film’s obsession with the uncanniness of ningyō (literally, “human-shaped figures”) in the form of dolls, puppets, automata, androids, and cyborgs. In interviews, Oshii has acknowledged the importance of the concept of the uncanny (unheimlich in German; bukimina in Japanese) and its relation to ningyō for an understanding of Ghost in the Shell 2.1 This concern is one that the sequel shares with the first movie, but Ghost in the Shell 2 goes well beyond the earlier film in the scope of its engagement. Of particular interest is Ghost in the Shell 2’s repeated references to the erotic grotesque dolls constructed and photographed by German Surrealist Hans Bellmer (1902–1975). In this essay, I explore Ghost in the Shell 2’s intermedial play with various ningyō and how such engagements enter into the film’s complex evocations of the uncanny at the limits of the human. [End Page 222] Any study of the uncanny must acknowledge at the outset how much it owes to the pioneering efforts of not only Sigmund Freud but also Ernst Jentsch,2 the earliest writers to analyze the variety of complex phenomena associated with the uncanny and attempt to account for it in psychological and/or psychoanalytic terms. In addition, an enormous amount of critical attention has been given to Freud’s essay on “The ‘Uncanny’” (1919) by contemporary philosophers, literary theorists, and cultural critics such as Jacques Derrida, Hélène Cixous, Sander Gilman, Neil Hertz, Samuel Weber, and Nicholas Royle.3 In most cases, such post-Freudian readers of the uncanny have focused their analysis on deconstructing Freud’s reading of E. T. A. Hoffmann’s “The Sandman” (1816).4 In what follows, I am more concerned with discussing the uncanny as a literary and artistic motif with philosophical implications than I am in the explanatory power of Freudian discourse to account for the psychosexual etiology of the uncanny. In other words, I am less interested in rereading Freud’s (mis)reading of “The Sandman,” or in critiquing psychoanalytic metanarratives such as the “castration complex” or “death drive,” than I am in unpacking the function of the trope of the uncanny in Ghost in the Shell 2. Indeed, I argue that engagements with the uncanny appearing in Ghost in the Shell 2 should be regarded not so much as Freudian gestures on the part of Oshii as they are byproducts of Oshii’s remediation5 of the dolls of Hans Bellmer, which were explicitly designed to evoke the uncanny on many levels: more specifically, in terms of the repetition of déjà vu, the blurring of boundaries between life and death, animate and inanimate, and the doppelgänger. What binds together all of these instances of the uncanny is that in each case, the uncanny evokes a sense of unfamiliarity at the heart of the familiar, a feeling of unhomeliness in the home, an estrangement of the everyday. The defamiliarizations produced by the uncanny in Ghost in the Shell 2 work to destabilize our assumptions about what it means to be human in a posthuman world and how we might relate to all the ningyō with whom we increasingly share the world. “Once Their Strings Are Cut, They Easily Crumble” In his essay “From Wooden Cyborgs to Celluloid Souls: Mechanical Bodies in Anime and Japanese Puppet Theater,” Christopher Bolton points out the strong analogy in the first Ghost in the Shell movie between cyborgs and traditional Japanese puppet performance (ningyō jōruri) with respect to “the [End Page 223] divide between body and voice” that is “foregrounded by the ventriloquistic medium of animation.”6 There is no question that puppet-like characters and the division of body and voice are also important to the world of...
最长约 10秒,即可获得该文献文件

科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI
更新
PDF的下载单位、IP信息已删除 (2025-6-4)

科研通是完全免费的文献互助平台,具备全网最快的应助速度,最高的求助完成率。 对每一个文献求助,科研通都将尽心尽力,给求助人一个满意的交代。
实时播报
时尚丹寒完成签到 ,获得积分10
刚刚
刚刚
CC发布了新的文献求助10
刚刚
搞怪的翠萱完成签到,获得积分20
1秒前
CipherSage应助小葵采纳,获得50
1秒前
uscd_del应助zzz采纳,获得50
2秒前
听雨眠发布了新的文献求助10
4秒前
王森发布了新的文献求助10
4秒前
mao应助不晚采纳,获得30
5秒前
田田田chong完成签到,获得积分10
5秒前
Wjh123456完成签到,获得积分10
6秒前
6秒前
量子星尘发布了新的文献求助10
7秒前
共享精神应助失眠的绿蕊采纳,获得50
9秒前
10秒前
居政发布了新的文献求助10
11秒前
Akim应助雪白的元彤采纳,获得10
11秒前
华仔应助王森采纳,获得10
14秒前
大模型应助lqy1214采纳,获得10
15秒前
HL发布了新的文献求助10
15秒前
16秒前
烟花应助听雨眠采纳,获得10
16秒前
17秒前
荼白发布了新的文献求助10
18秒前
20秒前
传奇3应助蒋宜颖采纳,获得10
21秒前
黑黑黑发布了新的文献求助30
21秒前
23秒前
大方百招完成签到,获得积分10
23秒前
Gin发布了新的文献求助10
23秒前
王森完成签到,获得积分20
25秒前
CC发布了新的文献求助30
26秒前
28秒前
灯火葳蕤完成签到,获得积分10
29秒前
小二郎应助bzy采纳,获得10
29秒前
30秒前
kk完成签到,获得积分10
33秒前
量子星尘发布了新的文献求助10
33秒前
Leofar完成签到 ,获得积分10
35秒前
蒋宜颖发布了新的文献求助10
35秒前
高分求助中
Africanfuturism: African Imaginings of Other Times, Spaces, and Worlds 3000
Les Mantodea de Guyane: Insecta, Polyneoptera [The Mantids of French Guiana] 2000
The Oxford Encyclopedia of the History of Modern Psychology 2000
Chinesen in Europa – Europäer in China: Journalisten, Spione, Studenten 1200
Deutsche in China 1920-1950 1200
Electron microscopy study of magnesium hydride (MgH2) for Hydrogen Storage 1000
Applied Survey Data Analysis (第三版, 2025) 850
热门求助领域 (近24小时)
化学 材料科学 医学 生物 工程类 有机化学 物理 生物化学 纳米技术 计算机科学 化学工程 内科学 复合材料 物理化学 电极 遗传学 量子力学 基因 冶金 催化作用
热门帖子
关注 科研通微信公众号,转发送积分 3884834
求助须知:如何正确求助?哪些是违规求助? 3427070
关于积分的说明 10753003
捐赠科研通 3151974
什么是DOI,文献DOI怎么找? 1739970
邀请新用户注册赠送积分活动 839901
科研通“疑难数据库(出版商)”最低求助积分说明 785081