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Featured researches published by Mette Hjort.


The Journal of Aesthetic Education | 1999

Emotion and the Arts

Mette Hjort; Sue Laver

This collection presents new essays on emotion and its relation to the arts contributed from fifteen leading aestheticians. The essays will consider such topics as the paradox of fiction, emotion in the pure and abstract arts, and the rationality and ethics of emotional responses to art. Among the contributors are such noted authors as Kendal Walton, Rom Harre, Robert Solomon, and Jerrold Levinson.


Journal of Aesthetics & Culture | 2018

Guilt-based filmmaking: moral failings, muddled activism, and the “dogumentary” Get a Life

Mette Hjort

ABSTRACT To date consideration of negative emotions in the context of cinema has been largely limited to the issue of why spectators would be drawn to films that target psychological responses such as fear and disgust. The aim here is to consider the phenomenon of negative emotion as a motivating factor in the context of, not spectatorship, but film production. The focus is on documentary filmmaking with a strong ethnographic dimension, the camera being used to record the circumstances and culture of an ethnic group to which the filmmaker does not belong. Get a Life by Michael Klint (in collaboration with Claus Bie) is presented as an instance of guilt-based filmmaking, the filmmaker having repeatedly foregrounded his own guilt as a decisive factor in the film’s making. A so-called “dogumentary” film based on filmmaker Lars von Trier’s “Documentarist Code,” Get a Life is shown to rely on moral notions that are consistent with the future-oriented and redemptive aspects of the phenomenon of guilt. The filmmaker’s rhetoric foregrounds the idea of “making a difference” for the Nigerian victims of a devastating flesh-eating disease (noma) and further purports to challenge the norms underwriting TV reporting on the “Third World.” Analysis of Get a Life, however, reveals it to be a failed work on moral grounds. The filmmakers’ self-importance, deficient self-understandings, and self-deceptions regarding the bases for their putative actions on behalf of others are identified as especially problematic. The relevant failings warrant attention at a time when filmmakers from privileged cultures increasingly pursue performative-style documentary filmmaking, fueled by purportedly moral intentions, in a variety of contexts in the Global South.


Archive | 2009

On the plurality of cinematic transnationalism

Mette Hjort


Cinema and nation. | 2000

Cinema and nation.

Mette Hjort; Scott MacKenzie


Archive | 2002

The Postnational Self: Belonging and Identity

Ulf Hedetoft; Mette Hjort


Archive | 2007

The cinema of small nations

Mette Hjort; Duncan J. Petrie


Archive | 2005

Small Nation, Global Cinema: The New Danish Cinema

Mette Hjort


Archive | 2003

Purity and provocation : Dogma 95

Mette Hjort; Scott MacKenzie


Archive | 2012

Creativity and academic activism : instituting cultural studies

Meaghan Morris; Mette Hjort


Archive | 2008

The Five Obstructions

Mette Hjort

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Eva Jørholt

University of Copenhagen

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Ib Bondebjerg

University of Copenhagen

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