Collective Memory, Collective TraumaMain MenuDisturbances in the Theoretical FieldExcavating Cultural MemoryNew Directions for Archaeological CinemaTowards an Ontology of Animated DocumentaryAnimating the UnrepresentableWorks CitedJennifer Smartebce7f4d0c3f51cd2375c611f07f1557f9c89075
Your own quantum field of consciousness
12017-04-23T14:24:43-07:00Jennifer Smartebce7f4d0c3f51cd2375c611f07f1557f9c89075177321If you disturb this field – say, by tapping on it at a particular location – then it will set off a wave of ball-and-spring oscillations that propagates across the field. These are concepts, or ideas.plain2017-04-23T14:24:43-07:00Jennifer Smartebce7f4d0c3f51cd2375c611f07f1557f9c89075
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1media/ao.gifmedia/Bose_Einstein_condensate.png2017-04-22T20:40:19-07:00Disturbances in the Theoretical Field11image_header2017-04-23T14:25:07-07:00“A theory is exactly like a box of tools […] It must be useful. It must function. And not for itself. If no one uses it, beginning with the theoretician himself […] then the theory is useless or the moment inappropriate.” —Gilles Deleuze
Quantum field theory holds that the universe is permeated by a multiplicity of fields which, when excited, manifest as physical instances of fundamental particles. The fields provide an underlying intangible structure, and certain sets of conditions agitate discrete units—single electrons, single photons, single quarks—into being. I like to imagine that intellectual production of and engagement with film theory creates an analogous dynamic. Factors such as an individual’s body of knowledge, life experiences, and historical context form a field of consciousness—a frame of reference—through which certain disruptions can ripple and manifest in the mind as singular theoretical concepts. However, unlike quantum fields, our frames of reference shift constantly as a consequence of theorizing. The creation of new concepts means that we see the world in a new way, one that wasn’t available to us before.
As a student conducting scholarly work both within and between the fields of film studies and postcolonial studies—two concentrations which are both rigorously interdisciplinary in their concerns and methodologies—I am no stranger to Deleuze’s theoretical toolbox. Admittedly, my conception of film theory as a creative activity is shamelessly influenced by Deleuze’s open approach to history and concepts as Becoming rather than Being in philosophical terms. Nonetheless, reading Laura Marks’s article “A Deleuzian Politics of Hybrid Cinema” and grappling with her concepts of counter-memory in post-colonial spaces allowed me to articulate questions about collective memory and the ideological implications of indexical realism in the context of my own documentary work.