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Literature & Film in Lockdown, Part 3: Hitchcock, "Rear Window" (film)

Author
ThinkND - University of Notre Dame
Published
Wed 08 Jul 2020
Episode Link
https://go.nd.edu/6dccd0

Episode Topic:  Hitchcock, "Rear Window" (film)

Although Alfred Hitchcock’s "Rear Window" (1954) does not take place in the context of a plague, it is a film about being in lockdown. Its preoccupations may be subtly shaped by the context of the early 1950s which saw Americans return to ordinary domestic life after the upheavals and mobilizations of the war. The premise of the film is simple - a leg injury confines a photographer to his Manhattan apartment and he breaks the monotony by obsessively observing his neighbors. However, the film works on several levels: literal, psychological, symbolic. It explores what happens to our minds when we are cut off from the world outside the home, when the only travel we can undertake is internal, and when our own thoughts end up projecting themselves onto our surroundings.

Featured Speakers: 

  • Barry McCrea, Professor of English and the Donald R. Keough Family Professor of Irish Studies at the University of Notre Dame
  • Lisa Caulfield, the Director of the Notre Dame Global Center at Kylemore Abbey

Read this episode's recap over on the University of Notre Dame's open online learning community platform, ThinkND:  go.nd.edu/10ce19.

This podcast is a part of the  London Book Club Series titled Literature & Film in Lockdown".

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