Saturday, July 18, 2026

Myth, Mirage, and Modernity: A Critical Review of Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey

This blog is based on recently released movie 'Odyssey' and is assigned by Prof. Dilip Barad on analysing and sharing our experience and relections from the movie.

Introduction

When approaching a modern cinematic epic—especially one boasting a highly publicized A-list ensemble cast and grand historical ambitions—the expectations for both visual spectacle and narrative depth are inevitably massive. As I sat down to watch and review this film for my postgraduate film studies unit, my immediate impressions were a complex mixture of appreciation for its competent scale and profound disappointment regarding its execution of essential storytelling elements. While the director undoubtedly crafted a visually engaging piece of cinema, the film noticeably lacked the singular, visionary auteur signature—the kind of extraordinary, mind-bending structural innovation one might expect from a cinematic pioneer like Christopher Nolan. It is, by all standard commercial metrics, a "good" movie, but it is one that struggles desperately to transcend the limitations of its own blockbuster conventions.



As I processed my viewing experience, my observations naturally gravitated toward the intersection of cinematic technique and literary theory. A film is never merely a sequence of moving images; it is a complex text meant to be read, analyzed, and critiqued. Through the dual lenses of literature and film studies, I have structured my reflections into five major points of critique. By connecting these immediate reactions to established critical ideas, I aim to unpack the film’s problematic peripheralization of key figures, the stagnation of its character development, the breaking of verisimilitude in its mise-en-scène, the jarring linguistic disconnect of its screenplay, and finally, the essential learning outcomes derived directly from the narrative arcs of its mythological heroes.

1. Tokenism, The Male Gaze, and the Peripheralization of Helen

My first and most glaring observation centers on the film's deeply problematic treatment of Helen of Troy. The casting of a prominent, highly celebrated Black actress in a role historically whitewashed in Eurocentric cinema is, on paper, a commendable step toward inclusive representation. It actively challenges our preconceived, structural notions of antiquity and the visual politics of beauty. However, my immediate reaction to her on-screen presence was one of deep frustration—not with the actress’s performance, but with the film's glaring failure to utilize her agency.

Despite the immense cultural weight of Helen as a character—a figure whose very existence acts as the narrative catalyst for the entire epic—her role is rendered aggressively insignificant. She is granted an abysmally limited amount of screentime, appearing almost as an afterthought in the grander, violent tapestry of male-dominated warfare. In contemporary film and cultural studies, this phenomenon is frequently critiqued under the umbrella of tokenism. The filmmakers seem to have prioritized the superficial optics of diversity over genuine narrative integration.

We can examine this failure through the lens of feminist film theory, specifically Laura Mulvey’s foundational concept of the "male gaze." By limiting her dialogue and locking her out of the narrative's active progression, the film positions Helen purely as a visual object within the frame. She is meant to be looked at, fought over, and symbolized, rather than listened to or understood. Furthermore, applying the structuralist theories of Claude Lévi-Strauss, we see the film reinforcing rigid binary oppositions: the male characters occupy the "active/subject" space, while Helen is forced into the "passive/object" space.

In literary studies, postcolonial critics like Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak ask, "Can the Subaltern Speak?" In the context of this film, the answer is a resounding no. Unlike feminist literary revisions—such as Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea, which reclaims agency for the silenced woman in the attic—this adaptation refuses to "write back" to the myth. It places a highly capable actor in a culturally massive role, only to structurally silence her, making the representation feel performative rather than authentically subversive.

2. Flat Actants and the Stagnation of Character Development

This marginalization of Helen bleeds directly into my second major critique: the film’s overarching failure in character development. One of the most heavily marketed aspects of this movie was its incredibly famous, star-studded cast. Yet, as I watched the narrative unfold, it became painfully clear that the film was using the pre-established charisma of these Hollywood stars as a cinematic crutch to mask severely underwritten roles.

Character development—the psychological evolution, internal conflict, and transformation of a figure from the beginning of a narrative to its end—is fundamentally not up to the mark here. In E.M. Forster’s seminal literary text Aspects of the Novel, he draws a critical distinction between "flat" and "round" characters. A round character possesses deep psychological interiority and is capable of surprising the audience in a convincing way. A flat character, conversely, is constructed around a single, easily identifiable idea or quality; they do not evolve. Despite the high stakes of the plot, almost the entirety of this famous ensemble remains tragically flat.

From a structuralist film perspective, the characters in this adaptation function merely as actants—to borrow from Vladimir Propp’s Morphology of the Folktale. They serve purely mechanical roles to push the plot forward: the stoic warrior, the grieving king, the ambitious general. We are not given access to their internal dread, their moral hesitations, or their existential crises.

This cinematic flattening stands in stark contrast to the profound character depth we study in literary traditions. For instance, the deep, deterministic struggles found in Thomas Hardy’s Victorian novels, or the intense psychological and political complexities woven into George Orwell’s modernist texts, provide a masterclass in how external conflict must be mirrored by internal turmoil. In this film, however, the actors hit their marks and deliver their lines with professional competence, but the screenplay denies them the complex arcs necessary to foster genuine audience empathy. The result is an emotional detachment; I found myself watching the fate of these characters with a profound sense of apathy, fully aware I was watching celebrities wearing historical costumes rather than witnessing the lived experiences of mythological figures.

3. The Illusion of War and the Failure of Verisimilitude

My third point of reflection moves from narrative construction to visual execution, specifically concerning the film's mise-en-scène and its depiction of physical reality. Epic cinema thrives on its ability to ground grand, sweeping narratives in visceral, physical spaces. However, a glaring visual continuity error continuously shattered this illusion for me: during the massive, sprawling battle sequences, the sheer count of the soldiers in the background formations never seems to reduce, regardless of how many men are explicitly shown being brutally slaughtered in the foreground.

In film studies, the concept of verisimilitude refers to the appearance of being true or real within the established rules of the film's diegetic world. While we do not expect a cinematic epic to be a perfect historical documentary, we absolutely expect it to maintain internal logical consistency. When the visual evidence in the background contradicts the narrative stakes in the foreground, the film actively breaks the audience's "willing suspension of disbelief"—a foundational aesthetic concept coined by the Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

War, by its very nature, is defined by attrition, loss, and the physical decimation of bodies. The film's sanitized, digital depiction of conflict stands in stark contrast to the visceral, agonizing reality captured in literary war poetry. Consider Wilfred Owen's "Dulce et Decorum Est". Where Owen shatters the "old Lie" of glorious warfare through horrific, sensory details of gas attacks, drowning lungs, and dying men, this film operates under a digital illusion of bloodless attrition. By utilizing CGI duplication to keep the military ranks perpetually full and symmetrical, the film completely sanitizes the brutal reality of the conflict.

This disconnect can also be analyzed through Jean Baudrillard’s theory of simulacra and simulation. The war on screen has lost its connection to the brutal reality of actual historical violence; it is merely a digital simulation of a battle, prioritizing visual symmetry over physical consequence. This lack of spatial continuity undermines the emotional weight of the tragedy. If the visual space does not reflect the violence of the narrative, the film fails to construct a convincing diegetic reality, leaving the viewer acutely aware of the cinematic artifice.

4. The Linguistic Disconnect: Modernity vs. Antiquity

My fourth critique concerns the film's dialogue and its chosen linguistic register. The story is purportedly set in a distant, ancient past—a time of myth, heavy tradition, and classical tragedy. Yet, the screenplay employs a highly modernized, contemporary English vernacular. This choice completely fails to arouse the feeling of antiquity, creating a jarring, anachronistic disconnect between what we are seeing and what we are hearing.

Language in cinema is not merely a tool for plot exposition; it is the very fabric of the diegetic world. Drawing upon Ferdinand de Saussure’s semiotics, we understand that the relationship between the signifier (the word spoken) and the signified (the concept it represents) is deeply contextual. When characters dressed in authentic bronze armor speak with the cadence, idioms, and casual syntax of 21st-century modern English, the linguistic signifiers clash violently with the visual signifieds. The structural integrity of the film's world collapses.

In literary translation studies, scholars frequently debate the tension between domestication—altering a text to make it sound natural and highly accessible to a modern target audience—and foreignization—preserving the alien, historical, and distant feel of the original source text. The filmmakers here leaned entirely into domestication. While this modern dialogue admittedly makes the complex political maneuvering easier to digest for a contemporary mass audience, it strips away the gravitas, the poetic rhythm, and the ancient cadence necessary to fully immerse the spectator in a bygone era.

We can contrast this cinematic failure with the success of literary Romanticism. When a poet like John Keats wished to evoke the ancient, frozen world of antiquity, he utilized a heightened, slightly archaic diction that forced the reader to slow down and respect the historical distance of the subject matter. The film lacks this poetic elevation, opting instead for a flattened, transactional vernacular. The linguistic choices feel safe and sanitized. Without a formalized register, the dialogue flattens the cultural specificity of the narrative, making it feel less like a window into an ancient epoch and more like a modern boardroom drama staged in elaborate historical cosplay.

5. The Didactic Function: Thematic Learning Outcomes

My final point of reflection shifts away from structural critiques and directly engages with the film's diegetic world. Despite its cinematic flaws, epic poetry and its film adaptations historically serve a deeply didactic function—they teach us about the human condition. In reflecting on the specific narrative arcs presented on screen, two profound learning outcomes crystallized for me.

The Wisdom of Observation (Learning from the Mistakes of Agamemnon)

Greek tragedy and epic are fundamentally built upon the concepts of hamartia (a fatal flaw) and hubris (excessive pride). In the film, the tragic fate of King Agamemnon serves as a dark, cautionary mirror to Odysseus’s journey. Agamemnon’s hubris and his blind, arrogant return to Mycenae lead directly to his assassination. Odysseus, however, actively learns from this colossal mistake. When he finally reaches Ithaca, he does not march into his palace as a boastful king; he returns in disguise, carefully assessing the loyalty of his household and the threat of the suitors. Watching Odysseus internalize Agamemnon's tragic end on screen reinforces a profound learning outcome: the vital importance of learning from the fatal errors of others to ensure our own survival.

The Unbreakable Anchor of the Oikos (Supporting and Believing in Family)

The second major takeaway is rooted directly in the film's depiction of the oikos (the noble household or family unit). Beneath the battles, the monsters, and the divine interventions, the true emotional core of The Odyssey is the endurance of familial bonds. Witnessing Odysseus suffer for a decade solely for the chance to return to Penelope and Telemachus—and watching them, in turn, hold off the suitors and believe in his survival against all odds—is a powerful thematic anchor. It reminded me that you must support and believe in your family for as long as you possibly can. The narrative teaches us that when the external world descends into chaos and war, the foundational trust and loyalty of the family unit become the only true sanctuary.

Conclusion: Embracing the Freedom of Adaptation

In synthesizing these reflections, my overarching impression of the film is one of missed structural potential, yet enduring thematic value. It possesses the skeletal structure of a great epic but lacks the vital, pulsating connective tissue—character interiority, visual honesty, and atmospheric authenticity—required to bring it fully to life.

However, as a student of literature and film, I fully accept and respect the creative freedom of the filmmaker. Adaptation theory, as championed by scholars like Linda Hutcheon, reminds us that an adaptation is not a mere translation, but a distinct act of creative reinterpretation. The director has every right to mold the myth, update the language, and experiment with visual representation to suit their specific vision.

My critiques are not an indictment of the director’s right to experiment, but rather an analysis of how those specific experiments landed. For scholars of film and literature, this movie serves as a fascinating case study. It stands as a potent reminder that true cinematic resonance requires far more than just famous faces and massive digital budgets, but simultaneously proves that even in a flawed adaptation, the timeless, didactic lessons of human endurance, learning from the hubris of kings, and familial loyalty will always manage to shine through.

Works Cited

Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Translated by Sheila Faria Glaser, U of Michigan P, 1994.

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Biographia Literaria. Rest Fenner, 1817.

Forster, E. M. Aspects of the Novel. Harcourt, Brace, 1927.

Hutcheon, Linda. A Theory of Adaptation. 2nd ed., Routledge, 2013.

Lévi-Strauss, Claude. Structural Anthropology. Translated by Claire Jacobson and Brooke Grundfest Schoepf, Basic Books, 1963.

Mulvey, Laura. "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema." Screen, vol. 16, no. 3, 1975, pp. 6–18.

Nolan, Christopher, director. The Odyssey. Universal Pictures, 2026.

Owen, Wilfred. "Dulce et Decorum Est." Poems, Chatto & Windus, 1920.

Propp, Vladimir. Morphology of the Folktale. Translated by Laurence Scott, 2nd ed., U of Texas P, 1968.

Rhys, Jean. Wide Sargasso Sea. Andre Deutsch, 1966.

Saussure, Ferdinand de. Course in General Linguistics. Translated by Wade Baskin, McGraw-Hill, 1966.

Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. "Can the Subaltern Speak?" Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, edited by Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg, U of Illinois P, 1988, pp. 271–313.

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Friday, July 17, 2026

🎬 The Digital Gaze on Trial: Screenlife Aesthetics, Suture, and the Archive Effect in Mercy (2026)

This blog task is assigned by Prof. Dilip Barad on analyzing and interpreting the movie Mercy with the lenses of film studies. Refer and study this worksheet.

📌 The TL;DR

Timur Bekmambetov’s Mercy (2026) attempts a highly ambitious, albeit deeply flawed, synthesis of the claustrophobic "screenlife" format and a $60 million blockbuster budget. While it postures as a dystopian cautionary tale against AI justice and corporate surveillance, the film's polished Hollywood aesthetics and Amazon MGM Studios backing ultimately betray its core message. This comprehensive post deconstructs the film’s formal mechanics and ideological subtext through the lenses of meta-suture, remediation, apparatus theory, and panoptic surveillance.

Introduction: The Contradictions of the Blockbuster Desktop

Thrusting the spectator into the bleak landscape of a dystopian 2029 Los Angeles, Mercy imagines a hyper-surveilled society governed almost entirely by an artificial intelligence judge known as Maddox. In this near-future justice system, Maddox wields terrifying absolute authority, utilizing a massive municipal cloud of registered devices to assess a defendant's guilt. The film's central tension revolves around a ticking-clock narrative: the accused must prove their innocence within a grueling 90-minute window before facing immediate execution.



To convey this suffocating, inescapable nightmare of data monitoring, the film employs the visual grammar of "screenlife" cinema. This format dictates that the entirety of the narrative unfolds on digital screens, utilizing computer desktops, smartphones, and webcams as the sole windows into the diegetic world.

However, Mercy is fraught with profound structural and formal contradictions. It attempts to marry the gritty, grounded, and inherently restrictive aesthetic of indie screenlife cinema with the expansive, polished demands of a Hollywood tentpole. While the narrative aggressively positions itself as an urgent cautionary tale regarding artificial intelligence, the rapid erosion of personal privacy, and the rise of the authoritarian police state, its formal execution and corporate production background deeply complicate its ideological stance. The following sections will apply advanced media theory to evaluate how Mercy navigates—and frequently fails—its own formal constraints and philosophical goals.



1. The Ruptured Meta-Suture and the Betrayal of Screenlife Dogma

To understand the formal instability of Mercy, we must first deconstruct how cinema traditionally binds the spectator to its fictional world, and how screenlife attempts to alter that psychological binding.

The Mechanics of Cinematic Suture

In classical psychoanalytic film theory, the concept of "suture" describes the invisible processes that stitch the audience into the diegesis. The most common mechanism is the shot-reverse-shot technique, which smoothly guides the viewer's eye and masks the presence of the camera, allowing the spectator to forget the apparatus and fully immerse themselves in the narrative.

The Rise of the "Meta-Suture"

In pure screenlife, this traditional suturing process is replaced by what we might define as a "meta-suture." The audience is no longer stitched into the film through invisible camera cuts, but rather through highly recognizable, everyday digital actions that mirror the viewer's own lived experience with technology.

The erratic, anxious movement of a mouse cursor, the agonizing pause of a buffering video stream, the rhythmic pacing of typing speeds, and the frantic switching of application windows become the new, visible mechanics of viewer identification. According to director Timur Bekmambetov’s foundational rules for the screenlife format, the illusion depends on strict constraints: the film must remain entirely confined to a specific screen, and the actions must appear to unfold in real-time.

The Blockbuster Rupture

Mercy repeatedly and aggressively violates its own established screenlife constraints. Despite anchoring its premise in desktop interfaces and Ring camera feeds, the film frequently abandons the subjective screen to inject highly polished, traditional Hollywood action tropes. Viewers are abruptly pulled out of the immersive desktop environment and thrust into:

  • Sweeping drone-flyover shots of the Los Angeles skyline.
  • Elaborate, impossible 3D spatial reconstructions of crime scenes.
  • Explosive, traditional IMAX-style action cinematography.


Rather than successfully expanding the screenlife genre to accommodate a $60 million blockbuster scale, this formal instability violently tears the meta-suture. By constantly oscillating between the subjective, confined reality of a digital interface and the omniscient, objective gaze of a traditional cinematic camera, the film alienates the spectator. The desktop interface ceases to be a lived-in, authentic environment; instead, it is exposed as a superficial framing device that is easily discarded whenever the narrative demands conventional visual spectacle.

2. Remediation, Hypermediacy, and the Erasure of the Archive Effect

The aesthetic failures of Mercy extend far beyond its camera work, deeply impacting its construction of digital evidence and narrative truth. To unpack this, we look to the foundational media theories of Jay David Bolter, Richard Grusin, and Jamie Baron.

Oscillating Media Formats

Bolter and Grusin’s theory of remediation argues that new digital media constantly interact with and reshape older forms, oscillating between two distinct poles:

  • Immediacy: The medium seeks to erase itself entirely to immerse the viewer, attempting to make the interface transparent (e.g., flawless virtual reality).
  • Hypermediacy: The medium actively foregrounds its multiple frames, windows, and technological tools, constantly reminding the viewer of the interface itself.

The Archive Effect

Concurrently, Jamie Baron’s concept of the "archive effect" describes the unique spectatorial experience of perceiving found footage as a "real," pre-existing historical document. For the archive effect to function, the media must possess an indexical link to the past, often achieved through low-fidelity aesthetics—glitchy tracking lines, degraded audio, and unpolished framing. True archival fragments derive their evidentiary power specifically from this rough, unpolished nature.

Hypermediated Slickness in Mercy

Mercy heavily attempts to simulate this archive effect to build its narrative tension. The protagonist's desperate quest to prove his innocence relies on piecing together fragmented digital debris, including Ring camera feeds, doorbell logs, and municipal cloud archives.

However, the film's massive budget completely neutralizes this intended illusion. The digital environments in Mercy suffer from an overwhelming, polished hypermediacy. The multi-window desktop interfaces are flawlessly designed, rendered in pristine high definition. Even the supposedly degraded municipal security footage looks highly choreographed and professionally lit.

Because the visual grammar is so visually perfect, it completely strips the digital fragments of their historical authenticity and evidentiary power. Instead of operating as credible, authentic-looking digital debris that grounds the dystopian world in reality, these elements are reduced to slick, commercial product placements. The hypermediacy overtakes the immediacy, rendering the archive effect null and void.

3. Apparatus Theory and the Complicit Reciprocal Gaze

The spatial and psychological relationship between the film and the spectator undergoes a radical transformation in the screenlife format, a shift that Mercy exploits to highly unsettling effect.

The Hidden Voyeur

Christian Metz's highly influential apparatus theory has long positioned the traditional cinema spectator as a hidden, transcendental voyeur. Sequestered in the darkened anonymity of the movie theater, the viewer safely peers into a private world through the "keyhole" of the camera lens, seeing without ever being seen. The traditional cinematic apparatus is fundamentally designed to protect the spectator's passivity.

The Shattering of Distance

Screenlife cinema fundamentally disrupts this safe voyeuristic dynamic, and Mercy weaponizes this disruption through the concept of the reciprocal gaze.

When characters in the film communicate via video conferencing platforms or interrogation software, they are looking directly into the webcams of their devices. Because the frame of the film is the exact frame of the device, the characters are effectively looking directly into the camera lens—and, by extension, staring directly back at the audience.

This direct, reciprocal gaze completely shatters the traditional voyeuristic distance established by classical cinema. The audience is no longer safely hidden; they are forcefully acknowledged by the subjects on screen.

Forcing Active Complicity

In the context of Mercy, this technique strips the spectator of their comfortable, passive role. The film centers on a protagonist who is constantly being monitored and analyzed by Maddox, the municipal AI judge. Because we are viewing the film directly through the screens that Maddox and the state utilize to monitor the populace, our gaze aligns perfectly with the surveillance apparatus itself.

When the characters look into the lens, they are looking at us. We are positioned not as innocent, passive bystanders, but as active, complicit participants within the Mercy Court's invasive digital surveillance network.

4. The Ideological Subtext of Corporate Surveillance Capitalism

Perhaps the most troubling and analytically rich aspect of Mercy lies in its ideological subtext, which stands in direct, glaring opposition to its superficial narrative goals.

A False Cautionary Tale

The film loudly broadcasts itself as a progressive, cautionary tale regarding the immense dangers of authoritarian police states and algorithmic justice. The premise of a citizen facing automated execution unless he can outsmart a municipal AI is primed to deliver a scathing critique of the loss of privacy.

However, examining the narrative resolutions of the film reveals a deeply conservative, pro-corporate ideology. The crux of the protagonist's survival relies entirely on utilizing the exact same invasive surveillance data—the Ring camera networks, the municipal logs, the cloud data—to finally clear his name. The very system that condemned him is ultimately the system that provides his salvation.

The Digital Panopticon

To fully decode this, we must apply Michel Foucault's concept of the panopticon. Derived from a specific prison design, the panopticon is a system where subjects are continually visible to a central authority, leading them to internalize the surveillance and self-regulate their behavior. The power of the panopticon lies in the constant, psychological threat of being watched.

Mercy presents a society where this panoptic surveillance is absolute and inescapable. But rather than dismantling the panopticon, the film ultimately validates it.

Commercial Propaganda

When we consider the film's corporate origins, the ideological stance collapses entirely into commercial propaganda:

  • The film is financed, produced, and distributed by Amazon MGM Studios.
  • The narrative prominently and positively features Amazon's own Ring cameras as pivotal tools for uncovering the truth and saving the protagonist's life.

By framing the corporate surveillance apparatus as the ultimate arbiter of truth, the film completely fails to subvert the authoritarian police state. Instead, it aggressively normalizes corporate surveillance capitalism.

The narrative subliminally argues that while AI might have occasional "glitches," the total eradication of personal privacy is a necessary, and ultimately beneficial, trade-off for civic security. The Mercy Capital Court system is preserved, the corporate panopticon is legitimized, and the film functions as a highly effective, $60 million advertisement for the continued expansion of domestic monitoring technologies.

🏁 Conclusion: A Compromised Vision

Mercy (2026) stands as a cinematic text fundamentally at war with itself, trapped hopelessly between its independent, experimental screenlife roots and its massive blockbuster realities. It utilizes the intimate, boundary-pushing aesthetics of the desktop format only to dilute them with traditional Hollywood conventions that violently shatter the meta-suture. It attempts to conjure the gritty authenticity of the archive effect, but smothers it beneath the glossy, hypermediated sheen of a massive production budget.

While it effectively utilizes apparatus theory to force the spectator into a complicit, reciprocal gaze with the surveillance state, it ultimately betrays this critical positioning in its final act. It gestures toward an urgent critique of surveillance capitalism, yet its narrative relies heavily on the normalization of those exact corporate technologies to resolve its conflicts. Ultimately, a rigorous formal and ideological analysis of Mercy reveals a highly polished piece of corporate media that pacifies the spectator. It transforms a potent dystopian warning into a slick endorsement of the very systems observing us, proving that in the modern digital age, even our deepest anxieties about surveillance can be commodified, packaged, and sold back to us.

References

Adlakha, S. (2026). Mercy review. IGN Nordic. https://nordic.ign.com/mercy-2026/103128/review/mercy-review

Barad, Dilip. (2026). Film studies - Screenlife Cinema - Mercy (2026). 10.13140/RG.2.2.28605.42720. 

Crispin Quiñonez, V. (2024). I can't move my cursor, or can I? Development of early screenlife [Master's thesis, Stockholm University]. DiVA portal. https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1991569/FULLTEXT01.pdf

Hofmann, M. (2025). Sticky. Open Screens, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.16995/OS.18418

St. Petersburg State University. (2023, March 9). Timur Bekmambetov and screenlife: A new language of storytelling? https://english.spbu.ru/news-events/calendar/timur-bekmambetov-and-screenlife-new-language-storytelling

Wikipedia contributors. (2026, June 1). Screenlife. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screenlife

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Thursday, July 16, 2026

The Relentless Eye: A Cinematic Analysis of the One-Shot Film and Sam Mendes's 1917

This blog task is assigned by Prof. Dilip Barad on studying one-shot films and understanding various concepts pertaining to one-shot films and film studies.

Introduction

In traditional cinematic grammar, the cut (découpage) is the fundamental unit of narrative construction. Through montage, directors fragment time and space, synthesizing disparate images to construct meaning, manipulate pacing, and guide the spectator's emotional response. The edit provides cognitive relief—a visual punctuation mark that allows the audience to process information from a safe, curated distance. However, the "one-shot" or continuous take deliberately subverts this foundational syntax. By discarding the cut, filmmakers strip away the psychological safety net of montage, transforming the screen into a relentless, unblinking witness to reality.

Within a film studies framework, the one-shot is not merely a logistical gimmick or a display of technical bravado; it is a profound structural choice that alters the audience's phenomenological relationship with the moving image. It enforces temporal continuity, trapping the viewer in the immediate present of the narrative. This blog explores the theoretical underpinnings and technical mechanics of the one-shot format. By dissecting specific cinematic techniques—such as blocking, character color coding, and spatial integrity—and applying them to a rigorous analysis of Sam Mendes's World War I epic 1917 (2019), we can understand how the continuous take elevates film from passive observation to visceral, kinetic empathy.

The Theoretical Framework: My Understanding of the One-Shot Film

My initial encounter with this demanding format occurred recently during my postgraduate film studies unit. I watched the gripping Netflix limited series Adolescence—a viewing experience that fundamentally reshaped my understanding of screen narratives. Seeing an entire story unfold in real-time without a single visible edit across hour-long episodes was a staggering revelation. It was this specific encounter with the raw, unblinking tension of Adolescence that first introduced me to the concept and mechanics of the one-shot format. The series completely shifted my academic perspective, prompting me to investigate exactly how removing the safety of the cut alters our cognitive and emotional reception of moving images.

Official trailer for Adolescence (Netflix, 2025)

To analyze the one-shot film requires moving beyond a mere description of its unbroken nature and examining how it functions as a distinct semiotic system. When the traditional language of editing is removed, the filmmaker must rely entirely on the internal dynamics of the frame.

Temporal Continuity and Realism

  • The Rejection of Montage: While early theorists like Sergei Eisenstein argued that meaning is generated through the collision of shots (montage), theorists like André Bazin championed the long take. The one-shot film embodies Bazin's pursuit of cinematic realism. By maintaining continuous screen time, the film aligns perfectly with diegetic story time. The audience experiences the weight of every passing second, creating an inescapable temporal claustrophobia.
  • Sculpting in Time: This format literalizes Andrei Tarkovsky's concept of filmmaking as "sculpting in time." The director cannot artificially compress a grueling journey or skip over moments of mundane tension. The continuous timeline forces the spectator to endure the psychological burden of waiting, anticipating, and surviving alongside the protagonist.

Guiding the Gaze: Techniques of the Continuous Frame

Without the ability to cut to a close-up to emphasize a detail, or cut to a wide shot to establish geography, how does a director guide the audience's eye? Educational breakdowns, such as the In Depth Cine video essay "How To Shoot A Scene With A Single Camera," illuminate the complex mise-en-scène required to achieve this.

  • Character Color and Wardrobe Contrast: In a constantly moving frame, a subject can easily be lost against a chaotic background. As discussed in video analyses of the format, directors heavily rely on character color coding. By assigning the protagonist a specific color palette that contrasts sharply with the production design, the filmmaker uses color theory as a substitute for an edit. The viewer's eye is naturally drawn to the contrasting hue, allowing the camera to remain wide while maintaining clear visual focus on the character's trajectory.
  • Dynamic Blocking and Depth of Field: The physical choreography of actors (blocking) must work in perfect tandem with camera movement. Characters move across the z-axis (towards and away from the lens) to artificially create the effect of a close-up or a wide shot within a single take. Rack focusing—shifting the focal plane from foreground to background—directs the audience's attention without ever breaking the visual continuity.
  • Environmental Cues and Lighting: Lighting transitions replace the scene transition. A character stepping from a cool, dimly lit interior into a harsh, brilliantly exposed exterior signals a narrative shift. These practical lighting changes are meticulously timed to guide the viewer's emotional state, acting as the invisible cuts of the one-shot film.

The True vs. The Simulated Take

  • The Authentic Unbroken Take: Films like Sebastian Schipper's Victoria (2015) are captured in a single, genuinely unbroken rolling of the camera. This introduces an element of live, high-wire theatricality. The diegetic tension on screen is mirrored by the practical tension of the production, as a single error requires a complete reset.
  • The Simulated Take (Trompe l'œil): Films like Alejandro G. Iñárritu's Birdman (2014) employ hidden edits—whip pans, crossing through dark shadows, or digital plate blending—to stitch multiple takes into a seamless illusion. From a structuralist perspective, this approach is fascinating: it utilizes the highly artificial manipulation of digital effects to achieve an aesthetic of pure, uninterrupted realism.

An Analytical Case Study: Sam Mendes's 1917

Sam Mendes's 1917 stands as a monumental achievement in the simulated one-shot format. The narrative follows two young British soldiers, Schofield and Blake, tasked with delivering a message across enemy lines to prevent a massacre. The continuous take is not an aesthetic afterthought; it is the structural spine of the film, designed to strip the viewer of their omniscient distance and plunge them into the trenches.

Official trailer for 1917 (Universal Pictures, 2019)

Structural Urgency and Kinetic Empathy

  • Eliminating the Psychological Buffer: War films typically rely on rapid, chaotic editing to convey the disorientation of combat. 1917 does the inverse. By locking the audience into a continuous perspective, Mendes eliminates the psychological buffer of the cut. There is no escape to a safer vantage point. The audience is bound to Schofield and Blake, sharing their exhaustion, their terror, and their claustrophobia. This creates a profound state of kinetic empathy; the physical exertion of the characters translates directly into the somatic experience of the viewer.
  • The Inescapability of Consequence: When a character is suddenly killed, there is no cutaway to a reaction shot to soften the blow, nor a time-lapse to process the grief. The trauma occurs in the same unbroken breath as the preceding quiet conversation. The one-shot format mirrors the sudden, senseless, and abrupt finality of death on the Western Front, denying the audience the cinematic comfort of traditional mourning.

Reverse-Engineered Mise-en-Scène

  • Spatial Contiguity: Because pacing could not be dictated in the editing room, it had to be built into the physical environment. The production design of 1917 was reverse-engineered from the script's temporal demands. If a dialogue exchange between the corporals required three minutes of walking, the physical trench had to be constructed to exact proportional length to accommodate that specific duration.
  • The Roving Subjective Camera: Cinematographer Roger Deakins utilized specialized equipment, such as the ARRI Trinity stabilization rig, to maintain spatial contiguity. The camera operates in a state of fluid subjectivity. It tracks behind the soldiers, adopting their limited field of vision, then gracefully floats in front of them, turning the audience into an obstacle they must push past. This constant spatial negotiation keeps the frame dynamic and psychologically active.

Color Theory and Nightmarish Illumination

  • The Écoust Sequence: The use of lighting and character color reaches its zenith during the nighttime sequence in the ruined French town of Écoust-Saint-Mein. As Schofield navigates the skeletal ruins, the only illumination comes from German magnesium flares arcing across the sky. The stark, sweeping shadows act as a massive, environmental shutter, plunging the screen into darkness before erupting into a hellish, monochromatic orange.
  • Visual Isolation: In this sequence, Schofield's dirt-caked, earth-toned uniform contrasts with the blinding, artificial light of the flares and the subsequent burning church. The color palette shifts from the muddy, desaturated browns of the trenches to a stark, high-contrast nightmare. The camera's refusal to cut heightens the surrealism of this environment. We watch the light shift in real-time, mapping out the geography of danger without a single expositional edit.

Diegetic Sound as the Invisible Edit

  • Spatial Audio Design: In the absence of visual cuts, sound design dictates the geography of the film. 1917 relies almost entirely on diegetic sound to warn the audience (and the characters) of incoming threats. The distant rumble of artillery, the whine of a dogfight overhead, or the sudden snap of a tripwire are mixed spatially. Sound replaces the visual cue; the audience hears a threat off-screen before the continuous camera slowly pans to reveal it, building an agonizing sense of anticipation.

Conclusion

The one-shot film is a demanding semiotic exercise that forces both the filmmaker and the spectator to relearn the language of cinema. By abandoning the cut, directors must master the intricate orchestration of blocking, character color coding, and lighting transitions to maintain narrative clarity within an unyielding temporal frame.

Sam Mendes's 1917 proves that when applied with rigorous thematic purpose, the simulated continuous take transcends technical novelty. It becomes a tool of unparalleled immersion. By anchoring the camera to the relentless forward momentum of its protagonists, the film collapses the distance between the screen and the audience, proving that the most devastating way to witness the horrors of war is to strip away the safety of the edit and simply refuse to look away.

Works Cited

1917. Directed by Sam Mendes, performances by George MacKay and Dean-Charles Chapman, Universal Pictures, 2019.

"How To Shoot A Scene With A Single Camera." YouTube, uploaded by In Depth Cine, 4 July 2021, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jq5SNLM0gzQ.

Wikipedia contributors. "1917 (2019 film)." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 10 July 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1917_(2019_film). Accessed 15 July 2026.

Wikipedia contributors. "One-shot film." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 12 July 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-shot_film. Accessed 15 July 2026.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Poetry and Poststructuralism: An AI-Assisted Exploration of Deconstruction

Poetry and Poststructuralism: An AI-Assisted Exploration of Deconstruction

This thinking activity is assigned by Prof. Dilip Barad on understanding the concept of deconstruction using AI.

Introduction[cite

For decades, traditional literary criticism operated under the assumption that a text was a transparent window into an author's mind or a reflection of an objective reality.[cite: 173] Poststructuralism radically challenges this assumption. Rooted in the linguistic theories of Ferdinand de Saussure, poststructuralism argues that language is an independent, self-contained system of signs.[cite: 174] Meaning does not arise from a word's direct connection to an object in the real world, but rather from its differences and relationships with other words within the linguistic system.[cite: 175] Consequently, humans do not invent language to express pre-existing ideas;[cite: 176] instead, we are the products of the meanings and structures we learn and reproduce.[cite: 177]

From this theoretical foundation emerges Deconstruction, a critical practice most closely associated with the philosopher Jacques Derrida.[cite: 178] Deconstruction is not merely a method of destruction, but a meticulous unraveling of a text to expose its "unconscious" or "textual subconscious".[cite: 179] By reading a text "against the grain," deconstructive critics seek to expose internal contradictions, shifting meanings, and the inherent instability of language itself.[cite: 180] They demonstrate how texts are characterized by disunity rather than unity, teeming with "warring forces of signification" that resist a single, stable interpretation.[cite: 181]

In this lab activity, we utilized Artificial Intelligence to generate two original poems and subsequently subjected them to rigorous deconstructive analysis.[cite: 182] By applying the methodologies outlined by Peter Barry and Catherine Belsey, this project aims to demonstrate how even newly synthesized texts are vulnerable to the inescapable slippage and paradoxes of language.[cite: 183]

Deconstructing Poem 1 – "Ghosts in the Matrix"

The Poem:[cite: 185]

The glowing screen replaces aged wood,[cite: 186] Where algorithms map the poet's mind,[cite: 187] And data streams interpret, as they should,[cite: 188] The subtle truths that authors left behind.[cite: 189] We count the nouns and parse the syntax deep,[cite: 190] Through networks built of silicon and wire,[cite: 191] To see if calculating engines weep,[cite: 192] Or capture sparks of literary fire.[cite: 193] Yet still the ghost within the code remains,[cite: 194] A human breath that logic cannot snare,[cite: 195] For poetry endures beyond the chains[cite: 196] Of digital matrices in the air.[cite: 197]
Image propmt: Abstract high-quality digital art. Crisp, glowing lines of binary code and digital matrices gradually dissolving and morphing into organic, chaotic, flowing shapes like swirling smoke and vibrant autumn leaves. The composition should visually symbolize the tension between rigid technological logic and the elusive, untamed nature of human poetry. Dramatic lighting, deep dark background with glowing blue and gold accents, cyberpunk meets nature, 8k resolution, highly detailed and evocative.



Analysis: Applying Peter Barry’s Three-Stage Model[cite: 199]

To deconstruct this poem, we apply Peter Barry's three-stage model, looking for the paradoxes and fault-lines that disrupt the text's apparent unity.[cite: 199]

1. The Verbal Stage:[cite: 200]

The verbal stage requires us to search for paradoxes and contradictions at the literal, surface level of the text.[cite: 200] The poem is instantly fractured by its own vocabulary. The phrase "calculating engines weep" creates a severe verbal collision.[cite: 201] It forces an inherently emotionless, mathematical subject (engines) to perform a deeply human, emotional action (weep).[cite: 202]

Furthermore, the poem describes algorithms attempting to "map the poet's mind."[cite: 203] This creates a contradiction between the rigid, measurable geometry implied by "map" and the abstract, infinite, and unmappable realm of human creativity.[cite: 204] The text is at war with itself, attempting to quantify the unquantifiable.[cite: 205]

2. The Textual Stage:[cite: 206]

In the textual stage, the critic looks for shifts, breaks, and discontinuities in tone, attitude, or focus, which reveal the text's lack of a fixed and unified position.[cite: 206] The first two stanzas of the poem maintain a confident, almost empirical tone, utilizing active, scientific verbs like "map," "interpret," "count," and "parse."[cite: 207] The poem seems to champion the analytical power of the digital age.[cite: 208]

However, the third stanza introduces a massive rupture in tone and attitude.[cite: 209] The vocabulary abruptly shifts away from empiricism and into the realm of the supernatural and the intangible, utilizing words like "ghost," "breath," and "air."[cite: 210] This linguistic fault-line exposes the text's repressed anxiety about the very technological mastery it initially celebrated, revealing a deep structural disunity.[cite: 211]

3. The Linguistic Stage:[cite: 212]

The final stage focuses on moments where the text calls the adequacy and reliability of language itself into question.[cite: 212] The poem ultimately reaches an aporia—an impassable knot or contradiction it cannot resolve.[cite: 213] It explicitly states that "logic cannot snare" the "human breath."[cite: 214] By declaring that "poetry endures beyond the chains / Of digital matrices," the text undermines the very system of structured language and logical syntax it is currently using to communicate.[cite: 215] It demonstrates that the ultimate "truth" or essence of the poem is perpetually deferred, proving impossible to capture within the structured matrix of language.[cite: 216]

Deconstructing Poem 2 – "The Tree at Twilight"

The Poem:[cite: 218]

Beneath a barren tree they stand and wait,[cite: 219] And ponder on the whims of time and fate.[cite: 220] The boots are tight, the bowler hats are worn,[cite: 221] A comic tragedy of men forlorn.[cite: 222] They pass the fading dusk with idle jest,[cite: 223] To quiet down the ache within the breast.[cite: 224] A boy arrives when twilight softly falls,[cite: 225] To echo empty promises and calls.[cite: 226] Tomorrow he will come, the youth declares,[cite: 227] So they remain, caught in their silent cares.[cite: 228]
(Image Prompt: A minimalist, surrealist illustration of a barren tree against a blank, white background. Two faded, faceless silhouettes stand beneath it, visually emphasizing themes of absence, waiting, and the void of meaning.)[cite: 229]



Analysis: A Belsey-Inspired Reading[cite: 230]

Drawing on Catherine Belsey’s poststructuralist framework, this analysis focuses on the primacy of the signifier, the collapsing of binary oppositions, and the endless deferral of meaning.[cite: 230]

1. Différance and the Deferral of Meaning:[cite: 231]

Belsey notes that in poststructuralist thought, the signifier only ever defers meaning, pushing it away and postponing it.[cite: 231] The poem’s core narrative is built around an arrival that never actually occurs.[cite: 232] The penultimate line, "Tomorrow he will come, the youth declares," is the ultimate embodiment of Derrida's concept of différance.[cite: 233] The presence of Godot—and thereby the meaning or "transcendental signified" that would validate the characters' existence—is perpetually postponed.[cite: 234] The "truth" is constantly pushed out of reach by the very language used to promise it, leaving the characters and the reader with nothing but empty signifiers.[cite: 235]

2. Undermining Binary Oppositions:[cite: 236]

Western culture and traditional philosophy rely heavily on binary oppositions (e.g., presence vs. absence, action vs. inaction, comedy vs. tragedy), which deconstructive practice aims to dismantle.[cite: 236] The poem actively dissolves these boundaries. The opening line, "they stand and wait," merges the stillness of standing with the active endurance of waiting.[cite: 237] More explicitly, the boundaries between genres collapse entirely in the phrase "comic tragedy."[cite: 238] The poem proves that these categories are not absolute or mutually exclusive;[cite: 239] rather, the trace of the "other" constantly invades the "selfsame," rendering the binary structures utterly unstable.[cite: 240]

3. The Primacy of the Signifier:[cite: 241]

Belsey emphasizes that poetry works by isolating signifiers to produce associations that are completely distinct from referential reality.[cite: 241] This poem is written in heroic couplets, a highly rigid, tightly controlled poetic structure (e.g., "wait/fate," "worn/forlorn," "falls/calls").[cite: 242] This form imposes an extreme sense of architectural order on the text.[cite: 243] However, this perfectly symmetrical linguistic surface acts as a mask for a narrative of total chaos, emptiness, and existential lack.[cite: 244] The musicality, rhythm, and rhyming of the signifiers continue to function smoothly and independently of any solid, stable underlying meaning.[cite: 245] It highlights language's capacity to construct its own mesmerizing aesthetic reality, even when describing a complete void.[cite: 246]

Conclusion[cite: 247]

Through these rigorous deconstructive readings, we successfully demonstrate that neither poem offers a single, transcendent truth.[cite: 247] By opening up the grain of these AI-generated texts, we expose the paradoxes, shifting viewpoints, and collapsing binaries that reside within them.[cite: 248] Ultimately, both texts serve as linguistic battlegrounds where meanings constantly shift, demonstrating the poststructuralist assertion that absolute certainty is perpetually deferred by the endless play of the signifier.[cite: 249]

References[cite: 250]

Abrams, M. H., and Geoffrey Galt Harpham. A Glossary of Literary Terms. 11th ed., Cengage Learning India Pvt.[cite: 251] Ltd., 2015.[cite: 252]

Barad, Dilip. "How to Deconstruct a Text." Department of English, MKBU, YouTube, 23 July 2023, https://youtu.be/JDWDIEpgMGI?si=WnmtixfH9lFYj-bJ.[cite: 253] Accessed 7 July 2026.[cite: 254]

Barry, Peter. Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory. 4th ed., Manchester University Press, 2017.[cite: 255]

Belsey, Catherine. Poststructuralism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2002.[cite: 256]

ChatGPT. AI-generated poems, literary analyses, and visual prompts for "Poetry and Poststructuralism: Deconstructing AI-Generated Poems through AI." OpenAI, GPT-5.5, https://chat.openai.com/.[cite: 257] Accessed 7 July 2026.[cite: 258]

Ketkar, Sachin, and Dilip Barad. "Derrida and Deconstruction: Short Video Playlist." Department of English, MKBU, YouTube, https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSmZQVxjN9_igmTIuaOKYkmb-mT3H6wDx.[cite: 259] Accessed 7 July 2026.[cite: 260]

Sethuraman, V. S. Contemporary Criticism: An Introduction. Macmillan India Ltd., 2010.[cite: 261]

Waugh, Patricia, editor. Literary Theory and Criticism: An Oxford Guide. Oxford University Press, 2006.[cite: 262]

"Poststructuralism." Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poststructuralism. Accessed 7 July 2026.[cite: 263]

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The Instability of Meaning: Applying Deconstructive Theory to Classic Texts

This thinking activity was assigned by Prof. Dilip Barad on deconstructing the poems to make us know how to analyse the poem beyond the surface level.

Introduction

Literary analysis often seeks to uncover a singular, definitive meaning within a text, but what if poetry is designed to resist such simplicity? By applying the principles of deconstructive literary theory to classic works by William Shakespeare, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, and Dylan Thomas, we can move beyond surface-level interpretations to reveal the internal instabilities and paradoxes that define their language. This exploration uses Peter Barry’s three-stage model to dismantle the apparent unity of these poems, exposing how they—and language itself—constantly undermine their own coherence. Rather than treating these works as stable, static artifacts, we will uncover how they act as fluid systems of signifiers, ultimately inviting the reader to participate in the ongoing construction of meaning.

“Shall I Compare these to a Summer’s Day” by William Shakespeare

Initial Understanding

This poem is about the poet’s love that transcends nature and time through port’s writing this poem for her beloved and thus his beloved becomes immortal. As the final quatrain suggests that his beloved’s beauty will not decline as the summer’s day.

Interpretation on the Internet

The speaker opens the poem with a question addressed to the beloved: “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” The next eleven lines are devoted to such a comparison. In line 2, the speaker stipulates what mainly differentiates the young man from the summer’s day: he is “more lovely and more temperate.” Summer’s days tend toward extremes: they are shaken by “rough winds”; in them, the sun (“the eye of heaven”) often shines “too hot,” or too dim. And summer is fleeting: its date is too short, and it leads to the withering of autumn, as “every fair from fair sometime declines.” The final quatrain of the sonnet tells how the beloved differs from the summer in that respect: his beauty will last forever (“Thy eternal summer shall not fade...”) and never die. In the couplet, the speaker explains how the beloved’s beauty will accomplish this feat, and not perish because it is preserved in the poem, which will last forever; it will live “as long as men can breathe or eyes can see.” - Sparknotes

Deconstructive Reading of the Poem

If we are to read this poem in the light of Deconstruction, we cannot arrive at the single meaning. There are more than one binary oppositions in the poem. Does a poet want just to immortalise his beloved or to assert that his writing is more keen to remain alive that the summer's day? Whether the poet’s love for his beloved or his love for his writing is at the center is a crucial question. Through his writing, the poet does not only preserve his love; he also secures his own name and craft. While immortalizing his beloved through this poem, does the poet not also immortalize the very "summer’s day" he seeks to surpass?



"In a Station of the Metro" by Ezra Pound

Initial Understanding of the Poem

On first reading, the poem describes a quick moment in a crowded, dark subway station where a person notices human faces passing by. The writer compares these faces to pale flower petals stuck to a wet, dark tree branch. It is a simple picture that shows how beautiful and delicate people can look, even in a busy and crowded city.

Interpretation of the Online Sources

In this brief but powerful poem, Pound captures a moment in the Paris underground metro system where the sudden appearance of faces in the crowd reminds him of petals clinging to a wet, black tree branch. The poem juxtaposes urban modernity with natural beauty, transforming an everyday scene into something hauntingly beautiful. Through this comparison, Pound creates a profound connection between the seemingly disconnected worlds of nature and urban life, demonstrating how beauty can be found in unexpected places. - Poem Analysis

Deconstructive Reading of the Poem

The Primacy of the Signifier and the "Semiotic": Poststructuralism, building on the linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure, argues that words (signifiers) do not simply act as transparent windows to a pre-existing reality. Instead, meaning is created through the differences and relationships between these words.

Isolating the Image: The poem creates meaning by isolating images like "faces" and "petals" from the actual 'noise' that would surround them in reality.

The Power of "Apparition": The word "apparition" introduces a strange spectrality that lacks referential reality. It suggests something ghostly, enhancing the poem's ethereal nature and offering a subtle commentary on modern life.

Visual and Rhythmic Form: The meaning is heavily dependent on the poem's visual and rhythmic presentation. The isolated lines on the white page emphasize the poem's form, creating a distinct musical quality.

Sound over Sense: Rhythmic elements, such as the near-rhymes of "crowd" and "bough" or "Petals" and "wet," draw on what Julia Kristeva calls the "semiotic". This semiotic quality—the rhythmic, musical aspect of language—disrupts purely rational, thesis-making thought.

Applying Peter Barry’s Three-Stage Deconstructive Model

Peter Barry outlines a practical method for deconstruction involving three distinct stages: the verbal, the textual, and the linguistic. By applying this model, we can uncover the "unconscious" of the poem and show how the text subverts its own apparent unity.

1. The Verbal Stage

This stage involves looking for paradoxes and contradictions at the literal or verbal level.

Physicality vs. Immateriality: The word "apparition" directly contradicts the highly physical, densely packed reality of a metro "crowd." The text is at war with itself, describing something solidly material as ghostly and immaterial.

Parts vs. Wholes: The word "faces" acts as a metonymy (a part standing for the whole), which actively strips away the individual identities of the people in the station. They are reduced to fragmented signifiers.

2. The Textual Stage

At this stage, the critic looks for shifts, breaks, or discontinuities in tone, time, or viewpoint.

The Grammatical Void: There is a massive structural break between the two lines, punctuated only by a semicolon. The poem completely lacks an active verb to connect the two images.

Collapsing Binary Oppositions: The poem attempts to bridge a drastic shift in setting—from the dark, mechanical, subterranean modern world to the organic, natural world of a wet, black bough. Ultimately, the poem questions and undermines the binary opposition between nature and civilization.

3. The Linguistic Stage

The final stage looks for moments when the adequacy of language itself as a medium of communication is called into question.

Deferred Meaning: By omitting a verb (such as "are like" or "resemble"), the poem refuses to definitively equate the two images. The language fails to explicitly state the connection, forcing the meaning into a state of deferral.

The Reader's Burden: Because the language itself leaves a gap, the meaning is ultimately undecidable and must be constructed by the reader. The text highlights the active role of the reader in creating meaning, rather than relying on language to deliver a single, packaged truth.

"The Red Wheelbarrow" by William Carlos Williams

On first reading, "The Red Wheelbarrow" by William Carlos Williams captures a simple, everyday backyard scene right after it rains. The poem focuses on a bright red wheelbarrow, shiny with rainwater, sitting next to some white chickens. It shows how important ordinary, everyday objects and moments are to our lives, even if we usually ignore them.

Interpretation of the Online Sources

"The Red Wheelbarrow" is a brief yet profound poem by William Carlos Williams that exemplifies the principles of Imagism and Objectivism in poetry. Composed of sixteen words divided into four stanzas, each with two lines, the poem emphasizes simplicity and vivid imagery. It begins with the phrase "so much depends upon," prompting readers to ponder what is significant in the unfolding scene, which ultimately reveals a red wheelbarrow "glazed with rain water" beside white chickens. The structure of the poem encourages a slow reading pace, allowing each image to resonate and come alive in the reader's mind. Williams' work eschews traditional poetic forms, lacking capitalization, rhyme, and elevated language, thereby inviting readers to engage directly with the images presented. This focus on the mundane yet essential object of the wheelbarrow reflects Williams' belief in the intrinsic value of everyday items and their connection to human experience. The poem serves not only as a visual representation but also as an exploration of language and meaning, aligning with Williams' vision of American poetry distinct from its English counterparts. Overall, "The Red Wheelbarrow" stands as a testament to the beauty found in simplicity and the power of observation. -EBSCO

Deconstructive Reading of the Poem

Deconstructing Materiality and Referentiality While the poem seems to assert the concrete, material existence of a farmyard scene, a deconstructive reading reveals that this "reality" is entirely a product of language.

The Myth of Materiality: Although the poem begins by claiming that "so much depends / upon" these objects, it does not actually define what depends on them, leaving the central signified—the why—deferred.

A Toy-like Purity: The colors "red" and "white" are presented as unqualified, making them seem bright, shiny, and "glazed". This creates a farmyard without the mess of real life, such as shadows or mud, suggesting the poem depicts a childlike, imaginative world rather than a literal farm.

Language as Origin: By reading the poem this way, the red wheelbarrow is revealed to issue from language itself, not from an external world of solid things.

Applying Peter Barry’s Three-Stage Deconstructive Model

Using the same model applied to Pound, we can peel back the layers of Williams's poem to reveal its internal instability.

1. The Verbal Stage: Paradoxes of Division

Forced Fragmentation: The poem relies on extreme enjambment—breaking the word "wheelbarrow" into "wheel" and "barrow"—which disrupts the coherence of the objects being described.

Contradictory Glazing: The phrase "glazed with rain / water" creates a linguistic paradox. "Glazed" suggests a hard, shiny surface like pottery, yet it is applied to something as fluid and formless as "rain water." The language imposes a fixed shape on something that naturally lacks one.

2. The Textual Stage: Breaks and Discontinuities

Symmetry as Subversion: The poem follows a highly patterned, repetitive metrical structure, with each stanza echoing the pattern of the one before. However, this extreme structural unity acts as a mask for the poem’s lack of a traditional narrative argument or logical progression.

Absence of Context: There is no "speaker," no "place," and no "time." The poem creates a vacuum of context. By stripping away all the traditional framing elements that would normally provide meaning, the text forces the reader to acknowledge that the "farmyard" is an empty space onto which they must project their own interpretations.

3. The Linguistic Stage: The Limits of Representation

The Failure of Referentiality: The poem attempts to ground itself in referential things (a wheelbarrow, chickens), but it constantly undermines its own claim to objectivity.

Undecidability: Because the red and white are so abstract and isolated, the poem exists in a state of undecidability—it is simultaneously a depiction of real objects and a pure, linguistic construct.

Role of the Reader: The poem's meaning is fluid and multiple, ultimately dependent on the reader's interpretation rather than any inherent "truth" contained within the words.

In conclusion, "The Red Wheelbarrow" demonstrates the poststructuralist argument that language is a self-contained system of signifiers. By deconstructing the poem, we see that it does not provide us with a solid, objective window into a rural scene; instead, it provides a play of surface, color, and rhythm that forces us to confront the fact that our grasp of "reality" is always shaped, limited, and constructed by the very language we use to describe it.

"A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London" by Dylan Thomas

Initial Reading of the Poem

"A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London" by Dylan Thomas describes a speaker who refuses to write a sad poem or cry for a young girl killed in the bombing of London during World War II. Instead of using cliché phrases or hollow grieving, the speaker argues that the child has returned to the earth and nature. By joining the elements of the natural world, she has achieved a peaceful, permanent state where death can no longer hurt or touch her.

Interpretation on the Internet

Not until the end of the world—when the darkness that creates and destroys all people, animals, and plants silently brings forth the last dawn, and the sea that lunges like a harnessed animal falls still, and I'm about to die and return to the sacred earth (including its water, crops, etc.)—will I utter the smallest sound of prayer, or cry into the smallest fold of a funeral suit, to grieve this child's extraordinary death by fire. I won't defile the immense human tragedy of her death by preaching some serious moral lesson. Nor will I desecrate the sanctity of life by writing yet another tribute to lost childhood innocence. This London girl is now buried with our oldest ancestors. She's covered in long worms and the timeless soil of Mother Earth, hidden underground beside the flowing Thames River, which does not grieve. The first death one experiences (or the world's first death) is final and encompasses all others.

Deconstructive Reading of the Poem

Applying Peter Barry’s Three-Stage Model

Drawing directly from Peter Barry's Beginning Theory, we can analyze the poem through three distinct stages to uncover its "textual subconscious".

The Verbal Stage

This stage involves identifying paradoxes and contradictions at the literal level. The final line, "After the first death, there is no other," is inherently self-refuting. The word "first" implies a sequence of a second or third, making the concept of a singular, final "first" death logically impossible. The poem opens with the contradictory phrasing "Never until," establishing a temporal paradox that destabilizes the reader's grounding. The text reverses traditional binary oppositions, portraying the "all humbling darkness" as a life-giving, "Fathering," and "mankind making" force, rather than associating creation with light.

The Textual Stage

Here, the critic looks for breaks, gaps, and discontinuities in time, tone, or perspective to show that the text lacks a unified position. The poem's timeline is highly erratic, shifting from the geological, apocalyptic "end of the world" in the first two stanzas to the immediate, burning present of the child's death in the third. The final stanza shifts once more to a broad historical vista featuring "London's daughter" and the "riding Thames," preventing the establishment of a single, unifying context. Crucially, the poem contains a narrative omission, failing to explain why the speaker's explicitly stated refusal to mourn is ultimately abandoned.

The Linguistic Stage

This stage focuses on moments where the adequacy of language as a communicative medium is called into question. The poem suffers from a massive performative contradiction: the speaker vehemently professes a refusal to mourn, yet the poem itself constitutes an elaborate, crafted act of mourning. The speaker vows not to "murder" the tragedy with a "grave truth" or a clichéd "Elegy of innocence and youth," attempting to reject compromised, traditional forms of utterance. Despite this rejection, the final stanza falls back into the very solemn, traditional panegyrical oratory it condemned, elevating the dead child to a robed, heroic figure.

2. Insights from Belsey

Integrating Catherine Belsey's Poststructuralism and Dilip Barad's article allows us to further dismantle the poem's apparent coherence.

The Primacy of the Signifier: Meaning resides entirely in the signifiers (the words themselves) rather than the referents (the actual child or the historical bombing).

Deferred Meaning: Phrases like "synagogue of the ear of corn" or "Zion of the water bead" are purely linguistic constructs that defer meaning (différance) rather than point to a concrete, external reality.

The Semiotic over the Symbolic: The poem's power relies heavily on what Julia Kristeva calls the "semiotic"—the rhythmic, musical aspects of language that disrupt purely rational, thesis-making thought.

The Death of the Author: Following Roland Barthes, we must ignore Dylan Thomas's personal intentions or the historical context of World War II to focus exclusively on how the text itself operates as an independent linguistic structure.

The Role of the Reader: As Barad notes in his deconstructive analysis of poetry, the meaning of such a fragmented text is ultimately undecidable and must be actively constructed by the reader's engagement with the text.

Conclusion

Ultimately, this deconstructive journey demonstrates that poetry serves as a dynamic, self-contained system of language rather than a simple window into reality or authorial intent. By tracing the verbal paradoxes, textual discontinuities, and linguistic failures inherent in these four pieces, we see that the true complexity of poetry lies in its inherent fluidity and its refusal to be pinned down. This process reveals that "truth" in literature is never fixed or objective; instead, it is an active, collaborative experience where the reader’s engagement is essential to giving the text its life. By embracing this undecidability, we gain a deeper appreciation for the limitless ways in which language shapes—and challenges—our understanding of the world.

References

Barad, Dilip P. "How to Deconstruct a Text: Sonnet 18—Shall I Compare Thee." YouTube, uploaded by Dilip Barad, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohY-w4cMhRM. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Barad, Dilip. (2024). Deconstructive Analysis of Ezra Pound's 'In a Station of the Metro' and William Carlos Williams's 'The Red Wheelbarrow'. 10.13140/RG.2.2.35052.37768.

Barry, Peter. Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory. 4th ed., Manchester University Press, 2017.

Belsey, Catherine. Poststructuralism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2002.

Crews, Brian. "Rewriting/Deconstructing Shakespeare: Outlining Possibilities, Sometimes Humourous, for Sonnet 18." Atlantis, vol. 21, no. 1, 1999, pp. 43–57.

Pound, Ezra. "In a Station of the Metro." Poetry Foundation, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/148805/in-a-station-of-the-metro. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Shakespeare, William. "Sonnet 18: Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?" Poetry Foundation, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45087/sonnet-18-shall-i-compare-thee-to-a-summers-day. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Thomas, Dylan. "A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London." Poets.org, Academy of American Poets, https://poets.org/poem/refusal-mourn-death-fire-child-london. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Uhlig, Vanessa. "Making Language Strange in Ezra Pound's Haiku." Prized Writing, University Writing Program, University of California, Davis, https://prizedwriting.ucdavis.edu/making-language-strange-ezra-pounds-haiku. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Williams, William Carlos. "The Red Wheelbarrow." Poetry Foundation, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45502/the-red-wheelbarrow. Accessed 7 July 2026.

Williams, William Carlos. "The Red Wheelbarrow." LitCharts, https://www.litcharts.com/poetry/william-carlos-williams/the-red-wheelbarrow. Accessed 7 July 2026.

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