This article is, for the time being, only available in Spanish: Melancholia: el apocalipsis íntimo y la angustia
NOTAS
JULY 2014
Abstract
This article examines the behaviour of the main character of Melancholia in the first part of the film from the theories of anxiety that Søren Kierkegaard and Martin Heidegger formulate in The Concept of Anxiety and in Being and Time. The aim is to enrich the analysis of the film interpreting it from a theoretical framework that, without excluding melancholy, explains Justine’s conflict from the reflection on existence. And in doing so, as the other side of the same coin, is intended to present Melancholia as a cinematographic representation of anxiety.
Key Words: Anxiety | Freedom | Melancholia | Kierkegaard | Heidegger | Trier
This article is, for the time being, only available in Spanish: Melancholia: el apocalipsis íntimo y la angustia
NOTAS
Volumen 4 | Nº 2
Ética & Cine es una Revista Académica Cuatrimestral, editada de manera conjunta por:
Programa de Estudios Psicoanalíticos. Ética, Discurso y Subjetividad. CIECS (CONICET y UNC) y Cátedra de Psicoanálisis. Facultad de Psicología. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
Departamento de Ética, Política y Tecnología, Instituto de Investigaciones y Cátedra de Ética y Derechos Humanos, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de Buenos Aires.
Con la colaboración del Centro de Ética Médica (CME), de la Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Oslo, Noruega.