Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Cinematic Geography: Mobilizing the Archive City
- 2 An Incriminated Medium? The City as Urban Spectacle
- 3 Cityscapes: Panoramas and the Mobile Gaze
- 4 City Limits: Crossing Boundaries of Place and Identity
- 5 Movie-mapping: Cinematographic Tourism and Place-marketing
- 6 World in One City: Travel, Globalization and Placeless Space
- 7 Cinematic Cartography: Mapping the Archive City
- Afterword
- References
- Index
7 - Cinematic Cartography: Mapping the Archive City
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- 1 Cinematic Geography: Mobilizing the Archive City
- 2 An Incriminated Medium? The City as Urban Spectacle
- 3 Cityscapes: Panoramas and the Mobile Gaze
- 4 City Limits: Crossing Boundaries of Place and Identity
- 5 Movie-mapping: Cinematographic Tourism and Place-marketing
- 6 World in One City: Travel, Globalization and Placeless Space
- 7 Cinematic Cartography: Mapping the Archive City
- Afterword
- References
- Index
Summary
There are ghosts out here in the Mersey.
(Us and Them, Peter Leeson, 1970)Of Memory and the City
Liverpool is a place and a space made up of many different cities. This is reflected both geographically in the heterotopic composition of its urban landscapes, and in the way the city has been understood conceptually. Throughout this book Liverpool has variously been conceived of as a virtual city, reel city, disappearing city, real-and-imagined city, surreal city, generic city, centripetal city, centrifugal city and archive city. While each of these reflect the specific and overlapping configurations of time and space that have left their imprint on modern Liverpool, it is the last of these – the archive city – that I wish to return to in this concluding chapter. Historiographically, the metaphor of the archive shifts the temporal cartography of the city-in-film away from a surface diachrony of historical narrative towards temporal verticality and depth. Re-envisioned as an archaeology of deep memory, it is less the linearity of historical time (the space of narration) that determines the way archival image-spaces are mapped, than ‘the cautious probing of the spade in the dark loam’ of urban spatial memory (Benjamin 1999b: 576). The prevalence of archaeological tropes of ‘excavation’, ‘unearthing’ or the ‘layering’ of urban ‘strata’ in relation to film and cultural memory, as well as reflecting Benjaminian ideas on time, memory and history, also signals the emergence of a critical spatial imagination that has begun to leave its mark on urban cultural studies.
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- Film, Mobility and Urban SpaceA Cinematic Geography of Liverpool, pp. 190 - 218Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2012