Title:
Orlando
Author:
Publication Date:
2022
Publication Information:
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2022]
©2022
Physical Description:
xii, 142 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm.
ISBN:
9780228014591
9780228014607
Abstract:
"A film that transcends time, Sally Potter's Orlando (1992) follows its titular character through nearly four hundred years of British history. Orlando starts life as a young man in the 1600s and then, mid-film, becomes a woman in the 1800s. Plot, production, and performance have all contributed to the film becoming a touchstone for Tilda Swinton's ethereal and gender-bending mode of performance. A Russian-French-Dutch-American-Italian-British co-production, Orlando was hailed as a monumental work of international art house cinema in its moment of release. Some understood Potter's film, a work of ruthless and ingenious adaptation, as moving away from the lesbian content of Virginia Woolf's novel. Russell Sheaffer uses a detailed analysis of screenplay drafts and more than three decades of reception to argue that while the film moves away from a direct investment in same-sex relationships, Orlando's articulations of embodiment, desire, and time have made the film continually more queer in the years since its release. Taking cues from adaptation theory and gender studies, this book meticulously charts the distinct shift from lesbian feminist text to queer film classic, arguing that the film is as much an adaptation of Woolf's A Room of One's Own as it is of its eponymous novel." -- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Introduction: Orlando as they/them (on the queerness of Sally Potter's Orlando) -- The body trapped in ice (close reading Potter's Orlando) -- The politics of a daughter (adaptation and the making of Orlando) -- In pursuit of a "common sentence" (Orlando alongside A Room of One's Own).
Personal Subject:
Title Subject:
Subject Term:
Genre:
Language:
English