(Im)personalizing Enunciation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71743/k99f5r76Keywords:
enunciation, indexicality, entextualization, cinema, linguistic anthropology, continental semiotics, Tamil Nadu, IndiaAbstract
In this article, I discuss the question of the performative act(ness) of filmic enunciation. Drawing on linguistic anthropological discussions of indexicality, entextualization and contextualization, and metapragmatics, I revisit the discussion of Christian Metz and others of “impersonal enunciation” in light of my own ethnographic studies of the Tamil cinema of South India. Doing so, I show, draws out the way that an ethnographic attention to enunciation, rather than lead “into” the text, spills outwards into events of cinematic semiosis. Such a shift in orientation demonstrates how the (im)personal nature of cinematic enunciation is not a medium feature of cinema but a situated, semiotic achievement; it is an empirical question and thus deeply political in nature. I conclude with methodological reflections for the semiotic study of cinema.

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Copyright (c) 2025 Constantine Nakassis (Author)

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