Article
Details
Citation
Ezra E (2006) The Case of the phantom fetish: Louis Feuillade's Les Vampires. Screen, 47 (2), pp. 201-211. https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/hjl016
Abstract
This article examines the recurring image of the severed head in Louis Feuillade's serial film Les Vampires (1915-16), linking it to the anxieties and traumas engendered by the First World War. In particular, it argues for a reconsideration of the image's emblematic status as a symbol of castration, and suggests that the castration complex itself may be best understood as a fetish, acting as a decoy for other losses that cannot be acknowledged overtly (those killed and wounded at war). Like a phantom limb, the castration fetish is a substitute that at once disavows an absence and acts as a memorial to that absence.
Keywords
Feuillade; Les Vampires; First World War; Feuillade, Louis, 1873-1925 Criticism and interpretation; Silent films France Plots, themes, etc.; World War, 1914-1918 Motion pictures and the war; Criminals France Drama
Journal
Screen: Volume 47, Issue 2
| Status | Published |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 31/07/2006 |
| URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/342 |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| ISSN | 0036-9543 |
| eISSN | 1460-2474 |