'The Man of the Hour':Hawthorn(e), 'Nebraska' and Haunting

Gilloch, Graeme (2019) 'The Man of the Hour':Hawthorn(e), 'Nebraska' and Haunting. Arts, 8 (2).

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

Abstract: This paper provides a close reading and critical unfolding of central themes and motifs in Alexander Payne’s acclaimed 2013 comic ‘road movie’ Nebraska. It focuses on three key issues: (1) the symbolic significance of hawthorn as a threshold between different worlds (Hawthorne, Nebraska being the former hometown to which father and son make a detour); (2) the notion of ‘haunting’ in relation both to ‘importuning’ memories besetting the central characters and to particular sites of remembrance to which they return; and, (3) how the film’s pervasive mood of melancholy is subject to repeated interruption and punctuation by comic utterances and put-downs. In presenting us with a reluctant ‘gathering of ghosts’, a veritable phantasmagoria, the film articulates a particular sense of nostalgia, of a ‘homesickness’ understood here not in the conventional meaning of a longing to return to a forsaken ‘home’, but rather as a weariness and wariness at the prospect of revisiting familiar haunts and reviving old spirits. Keywords: memory; film; dreamworlds; arcades; ghosts; haunting

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Arts
Subjects:
?? MEMORYFILMDREAMWORLDSARCADESGHOSTSHAUNTING ??
ID Code:
135156
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
31 Jul 2019 08:30
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Sep 2023 02:14