Figurations of trauma in Dario Argento’s Suspiria (1977) 

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Abstract 

In this first instalment of a two-part study the notions of structural and historical trauma are utilised as interpretative tools to illustrate the hermeneutic potential of historiographer and theorist Dominick LaCapra’s theoretical approach towards trauma within the discipline of film studies. LaCapra defines structural trauma as an ontological state of affairs that determines the existential nature of being human. It subscribes to the idea that being and existence are defined by an inherent lack that cannot be explained or even expressed through language and can therefore only be indicated in an indirect way by virtue of language (and all other forms of representation) performing its own limitations. Historical trauma, on the other hand, refers to unique historical events that can be contextualised in a very precise way in terms of historical dates and geographical location. Whereas the former adheres to poststructuralist perspectives on semiosis and the structures of language, the focus of the latter is on historical events and the attempts at their representation. Structural and historical trauma have a very complex relationship, in that they are interconnected, often related through the dynamics of lack (defined as being germane to structural trauma) and loss (defined as being germane to historical trauma), as well the dynamics of acting out (performing) and working through (coming to terms with) trauma.

In order to illustrate the difference between structural and historical trauma, two films are presented and analysed as being exemplifications of the respective definitions of trauma. In part one of the study the notion of structural trauma is used as an approach to analyse Suspiria (1977) by the Italian film director Dario Argento. Argento, one of the most famous European film directors working in the horror genre, began his career by creating gialli in the tradition of forebears like Mario Bava. With Suspiria he produced a film that not only established his reputation as an important director in the genre, but also became notable for its use of primary colours, the iconic soundtrack by the progressive rock band Goblin, and the stylistic presentations of graphic violence. The dominance of these elements in relation to the rather flimsy narrative of a “final girl” surviving the machinations of a coven of witches, in various ways subverts not only the integrity of the film’s diegetic levels, but also the plot and narratives that can be used to interpret the film.

The plot of Suspiria already presents different diegetic worlds, in that the mundane and ordinary existence of the everyday is contrasted with the world of the witches that the American protagonist Suzy Bannion experiences in a dance school in Freiburg, Germany. This contrast is related to two ways of looking at the world: Seeing wrongdoing as the result of “broken mirrors” (i.e. magic) or “broken minds” (i.e. human psychology). But the diegetic differences between these worlds are further complicated by non-diegetic elements such as the soundtrack and the use of Technicolor in the cinematography. These aspects of the film seem to have less of a narrative or symbolic function than simply being instrumental as stylistic devices for the spectacular visual and auditory set-pieces. The effect is that the emphasis seems to be on how these set-pieces are staged, with the result being not only the stylistic superficiality of the film, but even more so its pronounced diegetic artificiality. This is further accentuated by certain goofs in the film, such as exposed wires, when obvious sets are destroyed, or bad dubbing, when the dialogue evidently is not synchronised with the articulation of the actors. The viewer is therefore left with the impression that the boundaries between the various diegetic levels are permeable, but notwithstanding this that he or she would be able to “suture” these discrepancies by interpreting the film and its filmic mistakes from an extra-diegetic position. The different levels, from the diegetic to the non-diegetic to the extra-diegetic level of the suturing viewer, can be described as isomorphic repetitions or mise en abyme, whereas the movement between these levels is described by the literary theorist Gerard Genette as metalepsis (1980). Although suturing might seem to seal off the movement from lower to higher diegetic levels, the renouncement of suturing might imply that the extra-diegetic world of the viewer is as superficial as the diegetic world of the film.

This artificiality is further illustrated in the ways in which the film undermines narratives, not only in terms of diegetic narrative plot structures, but also in terms of the various narratives that might be used to read and interpret the film. This is underscored even more when the importance of the stylistic set-pieces is taken into account. The latter seem to be examples of what Tom Gunning (2006) would describe as “cinema of attractions”, but they also align with Sergei Eisenstein’s definition of this term with reference to graphic examples from grand guignol. The result is that the very function and relevance of narrativity are suspended, in that its limitations and superficiality are foregrounded. Whereas narratives normally have a suturing function, the fact that their failures and/or shortcomings become exposed could have the same effect as the metaleptic movement between the various diegetic levels. Both metalepsis and the exposure of narratives as being inherently limited and superficial have the potential to expose the shortcomings of the extra-diegetic context and world in which the viewer finds himself or herself. By implication the metalepsis cannot be sutured with meaning, even as the meaning in Suspiria as filmic text cannot be sutured. The result is a poststructuralist notion of meaning that cannot be sustained, which in part exposes the inherent structural failures of all modes of representation. In LaCapra’s conceptualisation of structural trauma these are the very features that come into play: insight into the precarious nature of the meaning(s) and modes humans use to deny, deflate and ignore the ontological gaps at the foundation of both their being and their sense of being. This is what LaCapra defines as paramount to structural trauma – and this is precisely what Argento, in a playful, but often very gruesome way, presents to the viewer of Suspiria. Historical trauma is notably absent from Argento’s version, but is taken up by Luca Guadagnino in the 2018 remake of the film.

Keywords: Dario Argento; diegesis; historical trauma; horror films; Dominick LaCapra; structural trauma; Suspiria

 

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Vergestaltings van trauma in Suspiria (1977) deur Dario Argento

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