Reading for excess: Relational autobiography, affect and popular culture in Tarnation
Publication date
2012-06-01
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Abstract
In this article I will examine a limit point in current methods of reading in autobiography studies, using Jonathan Caouette's 2003 autobiographical film Tarnation as a case study. Reading a powerful and deeply ambiguous key scene from the film, I investigate the limits of a narrative-based approach to multi-modal auto/biographical texts. Drawing on contemporary documentary studies, affect and autobiography theory, I propose that the rise of autobiographical acts which use multiple media presents autobiography scholars with the opportunity to diversify our methods of reading to include attention to the communication and representation of the historical, social and semiotic conditions of identity and selfhood which exceed narrative representation. I examine Caouette's use of collage to bring together home-made footage and footage from popular culture as telling a relational narrative: the story of the video camera, and the opportunities it provides to make film and television texts in the home as a technology of the self which influenced Jonathan's development as deeply as his familial relations.
Keywords
Affect, Autobiography, Home movies, Popular culture, Tarnation, Literature and Literary Theory
Citation
Poletti, A 2012, 'Reading for excess : Relational autobiography, affect and popular culture in Tarnation', Life Writing, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 157-172. https://doi.org/10.1080/14484528.2012.667363