Multi-subjectivity in Péter Forgács’s adaptation of Péter Nádas’s Own Death

Auteurs

  • Anna Gács Institute for Art Theory and Media Studies, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest

Mots-clés :

Autobiography, adaptation, experimental film, Péter Nádas, Péter Forgács

Résumé

Own Death, an autobiographical narrative by one of Hungary’s most acclaimed prose writers, tells the story of the author’s heart attack and resuscitation with a focus on the episode that is popularly referred to as a « near-death experience ». In his adaptation,3 the experimental film-maker Péter Forgács turned Nádas’s narrative into a melancholic-poetic-ironic complex of text and images that can be seen as both an adaptation of or homage to Nádas’s literary work and Forgács’s own self-reflexive autobiography in film. In my paper I discuss Forgács’s adaptation as an essayistic answer to Nádas’s philosophical autobiography and try to describe its texture of voice, text, and image as a reflection on the inevitably multi-subjective nature of adaptations of autobiographies.

Biographie de l'auteur

Anna Gács, Institute for Art Theory and Media Studies, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest

Anna Gács is an associate professor at the Institute of Art Theory and Media Studies, ELTE, Budapest. In 1999-2000 she was the Hungarian lector at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College of London. Her PhD thesis discussed theories of authorship and authorial strategies in contemporary Hungarian literature. In recent years, she has published about contemporary autobiographic culture. She is also a translator from English to Hungarian and the chair of the Hungarian Society of Writers, Critics and Literary Translators.

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Publiée

2018-11-15