3 research outputs found
Thinking diegetically: Spatiotemporal principles and mimetic rhetorical functions in videographic criticism
In the process of thinking diegetically, the videographic practitioner is guided by the diegetic (story world) logic of the films or media works under scrutiny. As opposed to videographic approaches that extract audiovisual segments from a narrative and spatiotemporal logic, this form of videographic work engages with the constraints of the source materialsâ diegetic tethers to (re)construct a story world in meaningful and productive ways. This essay seeks to explore the ramifications of such diegetic argumentation through an analysis of several videographic works: the authorâs âImagining OrpheÌe | OrphĂ©e imagineÌâ (Oyallon-Koloski 2023), Catherine Grantâs âFated to be Mated: An Architectural Promenadeâ (2018), Dayna McLeodâs âSpeculative Queer Autoethnography: Desert Heartsâ (2023), and Liz Greeneâs âSpencer Bell, Nobody Knows My Nameâ (2022). These examples embrace the intrinsic form of their source materialâs diegesis, prioritize the rhetorical impact of spatiotemporal construction, and deliberately balance the pulls between original and videographic diegetic logic through the application of precise videographic techniques. Video essayists use the formal, performative, and nonverbal options afforded by centering diegetic principles in powerful ways to shape their rhetoric