Making nothing happen: the transition from reactive nihilism to affirmation in Jim Jarmusch’s broken flowers (2005)
Author(s)
Backman Rogers, AnnaKeywords
Broken FlowersRoad movie
The eternal return
The affirmative life
Gilles Deleuze
Bill Murray
Existential dilemmas
Ethical dilemmas
Nihilism (Philosophy)
Road films--History and criticism
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http://www.rian.ie/54534/http://hdl.handle.net/10468/680
http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue%202/HTML/ArticleBackmanRogers.html
Abstract
This article draws from Gilles Deleuze’s interpretation of the Nietzschean concept of “the eternal return” in order to read Jim Jarmusch’s film Broken Flowers as being not merely a study in duration, apathy and reactive nihilism, but also a film which, through its formal repetitive structure, also offers pathways to transformation and affirmation. As such, I argue that the central protagonist, Don Johnston undergoes a subtle yet crucial change in the course of the film from a state of ressentiment to affirmation and becoming. I also characterise the film as an absurdist quest or road movie.Published Version
Peer reviewed
Date
2011Type
Journal articleIdentifier
http://www.rian.ie/54534/http://hdl.handle.net/10468/680
oai:http://www.rian.ie/54534/