Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

September 11 as Heist

View through CrossRef
This article examines two films, James Marsh's Man on Wire and Spike Lee's Inside Man in relation to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. It looks at both films as examples of the heist genre and explores the ways in which genre conventions enable the production of meaning about the terrorist attacks. The conventions of the heist film, it argues, help make sense of September 11 by producing a different set of relations to time and space that draw on the uncanny, rather than the traumatic, nature of the events. Narrating stories of transgression, both films place the horrors of September 11 in another context. Through the genre conventions of the heist, each film offers a view of New York in which the events of September 11 and the destruction of the World Trade Center stand as the center. Not yet complete in one, already destroyed in the other, the Twin Towers haunt these films. As Man on Wire and Inside Man each attempt to make sense of the world in which the city of New York is marked most powerfully by a profound absence, it is in their uses of the heist genre that they find a representational space in which to mourn the World Trade Center and the victims of the attacks.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: September 11 as Heist
Description:
This article examines two films, James Marsh's Man on Wire and Spike Lee's Inside Man in relation to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
It looks at both films as examples of the heist genre and explores the ways in which genre conventions enable the production of meaning about the terrorist attacks.
The conventions of the heist film, it argues, help make sense of September 11 by producing a different set of relations to time and space that draw on the uncanny, rather than the traumatic, nature of the events.
Narrating stories of transgression, both films place the horrors of September 11 in another context.
Through the genre conventions of the heist, each film offers a view of New York in which the events of September 11 and the destruction of the World Trade Center stand as the center.
Not yet complete in one, already destroyed in the other, the Twin Towers haunt these films.
As Man on Wire and Inside Man each attempt to make sense of the world in which the city of New York is marked most powerfully by a profound absence, it is in their uses of the heist genre that they find a representational space in which to mourn the World Trade Center and the victims of the attacks.

Related Results

Was heißt: sich in Nietzsche orientieren? A Review of a Selection of Recent Literature
Was heißt: sich in Nietzsche orientieren? A Review of a Selection of Recent Literature
Abstract This review essay brings together five books on various aspects of Nietzsche’s thinking and writing from the last four years, from different cultural and po...
The Mexico Earthquake of September 19, 1985—Earthquake Behavior of Soft Sites in Mexico City
The Mexico Earthquake of September 19, 1985—Earthquake Behavior of Soft Sites in Mexico City
From the september 19, 1985 earthquake there are several acceleration records for the soft (lake bed) sites in Mexico City. One-dimensional propagation models of the incident seism...
Covid Conversations 5: Robert Wilson
Covid Conversations 5: Robert Wilson
World-renowned for having made a totally new kind of theatre, director-designer Robert Wilson first astonished international audiences in Paris in 1971 with Le Regard du sourd (Dea...
RESURRECTING SIZWE BANZI IS DEAD (1972–2008): JOHN KANI, WINSTON NTSHONA, ATHOL FUGARD, AND POSTAPARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA
RESURRECTING SIZWE BANZI IS DEAD (1972–2008): JOHN KANI, WINSTON NTSHONA, ATHOL FUGARD, AND POSTAPARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA
On 30 June 2006 at the annual National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, South Africa, two giants of South African protest theatre, John Kani and Winston Ntshona, performed as the orig...
Psychoanalysis and Trauma: September 11 Revisited
Psychoanalysis and Trauma: September 11 Revisited
On November 9, 2002, a few hundred people, mostly mental health clinicians, gathered at the New York University Medical Center for two days of discussions on the theme, September 1...
Chantal Akerman: A Postmortem Bibliography, October 2015–September 2016
Chantal Akerman: A Postmortem Bibliography, October 2015–September 2016
A comprehensive list of publications (up to September 2016) on the work and life of Chantal Akerman that have appeared since her untimely death on October 5, 2015, in Paris, France...
Newspapers commemorate 11 September: A cross-cultural investigation
Newspapers commemorate 11 September: A cross-cultural investigation
On 12 September 2001, as Hans-Peter Feldmann documented in his 2002 installation 9/12 Front Page, the front pages of newspapers from 151 countries showed similar photographs of a p...

Back to Top