On memory beyond the facts: The fictional as an aesthetic resource in ‘Stalker’ and ‘Act of Killing’
Abstract
This study explores the interconnectedness of
memory studies and fiction as an aesthetic resource,
forming a significant area within artistic studies. The
analysis focuses on the anthropological representation of memory in two films: Tarkovsky’s Stalker, situated within the Soviet realism movement depicting
the post-World War II social, political, and economic
crisis of the Soviet Union, and Joshua Oppenheimer’s
Act of Killing, a 2012 meta-documentary portraying
a contemporary geopolitical context concerning individuals engaged in the military occupation initiated in Indonesia in 1959. The examination reveals
the pervasive role of fiction as an effective aesthetic
resource in representing historical contexts. Both
films, Stalker and Act of Killing, emphasize the necessity of conveying a nuanced perception of memory to
the audience. Furthermore, within the cinematic language of memory work, fiction emerges as an indispensable testimony to the director’s creative efforts,
serving as an intermediary force that transcends
specific spatiotemporal contexts and broadens
awareness of geopolitical phenomena beyond their
representative and factual confines.
URI
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