Global Journal of HUMAN-SOCIAL SCIENCE: C
Sociology & Culture
Volume 19 Issue 5 Version 1.0 Year 2019
Type: Double Blind Peer Reviewed International Research Journal
Publisher: Global Journals
Online ISSN: 2249-460x & Print ISSN: 0975-587X
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
By Jonas do Nascimento
Abstract- How can cinema be used to understand our society? Different sociologists asked
throughout history this question. Generally, they assume that since all subjects act within social
institutions, films necessarily tell us something about aspects of life in society. Besides, their
"visual power," and their narratives, would be even able to shape our expectations in
unconscious ways. That's because the “social life” is presented to us as orderly, where people
accept prescribed roles that they find satisfactory or unsatisfactory. Some of them portray
alienation and despair, as well as a series of ways in which people face their social conditions
and the challenges that life imposes on them. In this sense, watching a film becomes a
sociologically significant event as its experience affects us emotionally, psychologically, and
pedagogically. Based on this, the paper aims to discuss some sociological perspectives on the
relationship between art, cinema, and society.
Keywords: cinema, society, sociological theory, culture, artwork.
GJHSS-C Classification: FOR Code: 370199
ArtCinemaandSocietySociologicalPerspectives
Strictly as per the compliance and regulations of:
© 2019. Jonas do Nascimento. This is a research/review paper, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons AttributionNoncommercial 3.0 Unported License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/), permitting all non-commercial use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological
Perspectives
Keywords: cinema, society, sociological theory, culture,
artwork.
I.
Introduction
“…narratives are socially organized phenomena which,
accordingly, reflect the cultural and structural features of
their production... as socially organized phenomena,
narratives are implicated in both the production of social
meanings and the power relations expressed by and
sustaining those meanings.” (EWICK and SILBEY, 1995,
p.200).
W
hat we classify as a 'narrative' has a significant
influence on our lives. For example, it is the
narrative that usually fills the gap between daily
‘social interaction’ and ‘social structures.’ Not
coincidentally, the “stories we listen,” or "watch," often
reflect and sustain institutional and cultural
arrangements — while promoting many of our actions in
the world. However, if narratives may ‘reveal truths’
about the social life, where those ‘truths’ are
reproduced, flattened or silenced, in the second case,
they also may help to destabilize instituted powers.
Notably, thinking about the ‘social meaning’ of
narratives implies, therefore, recognizing that they are
constructed or given within ‘social contexts.’ In this
situation, we can use them as a ‘sociological concept’ to
describe the processes through which social actors
construct and communicate their visions of the world.
In our society, films can provide, for instance,
the ‘images’ (or ‘narratives’) of appropriate expectations
about the course of life, and the ways how people move
Author: Ph.D. in Sociology. e-mail: jonas.anasc@gmail.com
II.
Art and Sociocultural Life
“Art is notoriously hard to talk about.” It is with
this phrase that Clifford Geertz begins the fifth chapter of
the classic "Local Knowledge" (1983). And, when made
of "pigment, sound, stone," or without any clear
reference to the "figurative world," what we named ‘art’
seems “to exist in a world of its own, beyond the reach
of discourse." Of course, it is not difficult to talk about
art, but in everyone's eyes, "it seems unnecessary to do
so." For many, art “speaks, as we say, by itself: a poem
must not mean but be; if you have to ask what jazz is,
you will never get to know.” (GEERTZ, 1983, p. 94).
Thus, we often learn to 'feel' rather than 'think' about
those thought-provoking songs, or those impressive
paintings, or those films that thrill us whenever we
remember them. As Geertz remind, Picasso used to say
that wanting to understand art, would be like trying to
© 20 19 Global Journals
Year
within the social, political, professional, educational, and
familiar environment. Thus, given the power of cinema to
create meanings and to export (and hide) various
‘realities,’ how can sociology use it to understand the
social life? In other words, how can sociology deal with
an artistic language, a ‘non-real’ world, to understand
the ‘true reality’? Sociologists have not yet fully
systematized the answers to these questions. As we will
see, although one of the most important and, at the
same time, the most widely consumed art forms in the
world, cinema, as they draw our attention Heinze,
Moebius and Reicher (2012, p.7): “both theoretical,
methodical and empirically [it can hardly be said that]
has any tradition as a sociological object”. Indeed, the
institutionalization of a ‘cinematic sociology’ as special
sociology within general sociology (or sociology of
culture), has never happened. Which is to say the least
curious - given the increasingly central place that
images occupy in social and cultural life as a socializing
force and of considerable impact on the mobilization of
the 'social imaginary.’
On the basis thereof, I seek to present below
the theoretical-methodological challenges that sociology
has faced in film analysis – both as an 'artistic' and
'social practice.' From a literature review, I consider the
debate about ‘art objects’ through a brief presentation of
the possibilities opened in the field of sociological
analysis of art and, from there, I present some
theoretical attempts towards a sociology of cinema/film
as a subfield within general sociology.
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Global Journal of Human Social Science ( C ) Volume XIX Issue V Version I
Abstract- How can cinema be used to understand our society?
Different sociologists asked throughout history this question.
Generally, they assume that since all subjects act within social
institutions, films necessarily tell us something about aspects
of life in society. Besides, their "visual power," and their
narratives, would be even able to shape our expectations in
unconscious ways. That's because the “social life” is
presented to us as orderly, where people accept prescribed
roles that they find satisfactory or unsatisfactory. Some of
them portray alienation and despair, as well as a series of
ways in which people face their social conditions and the
challenges that life imposes on them. In this sense, watching a
film becomes a sociologically significant event as its
experience affects us emotionally, psychologically, and
pedagogically. Based on this, the paper aims to discuss some
sociological perspectives on the relationship between art,
cinema, and society.
2019
Jonas do Nascimento
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
Year
2019
understand ‘bird song.’ Nevertheless something that
has ‘meaning to us’ can hardly be felt only in its ‘pure
meaning.’ Inevitably, we describe, analyze, compare,
judge, and classify everything we see, hear, and feel.
Despite this, whenever we talk about art, the ‘excess’ of
what we have seen, or imagined we have seen, always
appears once again vast and inaccurate, or something
empty and false. In fact, “Sociology and art do not make
a good match,” said Pierre Bourdieu in “Sociology
Issues” (1983). According to him,
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20
“the universe of art is a universe of belief, belief in the gift,
the uniqueness of the uncreated creator, and the outburst
of the sociologist who wants to understand, explain, make
comprehensible, causes scandal” (BOURDIEU, 1983, p.
162-163).
“Who creates the 'creator'?”, this becomes a
fundamental question for many sociologists. Regarding
this, we should emphasize a core point: depending on
whether studies of art objects are allied with disciplines
such as aesthetics and criticism, they depart from
different premises than those whose fields are part of
the social sciences. For many art critics and aesthetic
theorists, for example, works of art are often conceived
of as 'miraculous revelations' typical of a historical
moment. With such thinking, many of these critics and
aesthetes imply that the central mystery of the work of
art must be ‘left unsolved,’ either because it would lead
to its ‘emptying of meaning,’ or because it would be
impossible, or even useless, to want to ‘access’ it. Also,
in many cases, the artwork tends to be “considered as
spontaneous expressions of individual genius”
(ZOLBERG, 1990, p. 6). However, this perspective is
totally at odds with the project of ‘social analysis of art,’
for which the artwork would have little 'mystery.' Social
Scientists will, therefore, seek to analyze the social
construction of ‘aesthetic ideas’ and the ‘social values’
embedded in them.
a) The Artwork as Social Process
Not apart from society, art production, as well
as other modes of social activity, incorporates the
texture of a standard of living. It means that there is no
ex nihilo creation. From a sociological perspective, art
objects move in a specific social context. Under these
circumstances, art inexorably express his condition,
implicitly or explicitly, either to affirm it or to deny it. In
this sense, we can take artwork as a ‘social
phenomenon,’ that is, an 'artistic fact' - such as a 'social
fact.' As far as their constitution or cultural complexion,
but also in their ‘transpersonal’ dimension. This way of
‘reading’ art then makes possible their sociological
analysis.
Thereby, sociology of ‘art objects’ must
comprehensively understand artistic phenomena,
starting from their connections with other aspects of
social reality. From this point of view, does not exist ‘art’
if we separate it from a ‘horizon of expectations’
© 2019 Global Journals
(Erwartungshorizont).
Recognized
as
'social
phenomenon,' the artwork becomes the product of
individuals with demarcated intentions that allows them
to establish bridges between what we consider 'reality'
and their 'symbolic systems.' However, this kind of
sociological approach often faces resistance in various
intellectual circles. Given sociology's refusal - at least its
traditional version - to address 'art itself,' it could not
come to recognize the specificity of the 'artistic object.'
Some authors describe this as an opposition between
'studying the art object sociologically' and 'the art object
as a social process' (ZOLBERG, 1990; HENNION and
GRENIER, 2000).
We can then divide sociological studies of art
into 1) those who seek an understanding of the
'historical-social conditions' that explain the creation of
artwork (aimed at revealing its social determination), 2)
those who, without wishing to make statements about
aesthetic experience, proceeds through a thorough
reconstitution of the 'collective action' necessary to
produce and consume art, and 3) those who propose a
synthetic approach in which both external issues (social,
economic and political factors), as well as internal
issues (aesthetic aspects) of art are analyzed as an
‘integrated system.’ Thus, the sociology of art objects
would be a genuine interconnection between the field of
'general sociology,’ 'sociological aesthetics,' and 'social
history of art' - as truly twinned disciplines (FURIÓ,
2000).
For example, German sociologist and musician
Alphons Silbermann (1971) argued that the aim of
'sociology of art' should be the analysis of a 'continuous
social process.' This process would reveal the
interdependent relationship established between artist,
artwork, and society, which would force us to consider
an interaction between various elements. Based on this
idea, the sociology of art would find a series of study
possibilities: the relationship and interdependence of the
artist and the audience; the social origin of some
categories of artists and their social context; the social
effect of the artwork; the public that receives and reacts
to the works, etc.
Silbermann claimed a universally intelligible,
convincing, and valid approach to the art objects, to
reveal how things became what they are, and clarify
their present and past transformations. By not
separating 'art' from its 'social reality,' the observation of
'artistic facts' gave to the sociology of art the character
of an autonomous discipline. However, the artwork itself
remained a marginal position in their analysis, which
pays more attention to the social environment that
allowed its genesis. Thus 'external conditions' appear as
their main analytical focus. Zolberg (1990, p.54) points
out that,
“because of sociologists' concern with the social, the
artworks themselves become lost in the search for
understanding society, ending up as virtual byproducts.”
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
b) ‘New Realities’ Through Art
If 'sociological analysis' of artistic practices can
be useful in understanding 'social reality,' there are some
authors, however, who will question the very 'causal
logic' that takes society as the fundamental productive
basis of epiphenomenal characteristics. These authors
will analyze how art itself fundamentally structures the
constitution of society. Sometimes, by rethinking the
relationship between the study of art and the study of
sociology, as pointed out by John Clammer in “Vision
and Society” (2014). Few attempts have been made to
investigate the possibility, not of a new sociology of art,
but sociology from art:
“given the ubiquity, persistence and apparent universality
of artistic production, does that fact tell us something
about the nature of society, rather than the nature of
III.
Framing Society: The Social Meaning
of Films
“When the image is new, the world is new.” - (Bachelard,
2003, p.63).
As we have seen, while social scientists belie
the notion of the 'artist' as a 'lone genius', the artist, and
in particular the art per se, "is not merely the end
© 20 19 Global Journals
Year
By asking this question, Clammer seeks to
bring the arts back to a central position about 'social
causality,' and this has a profound theoreticalmethodological impact. For this proposal not only
suggests a new way of looking at society but, above all,
places the 'imagination' back at the center of the
production of what we mean by 'social reality.' Thus,
some contemporary theorists will assume that cultural
practices represent an 'independent variable' — a
complex of emotions, desires, eroticism, responses to
nature, and other human beings that are embodied in
'material’ and 'performative' forms (ROTHENBERG,
2011). That is, in the development of human societies,
the arts would play a generative role, not just a
derivative one (DUTTON, 2010).
Authors such as Clammer (2014), de La Fuente
(2007), DeNora (2003), Gablik (2002) and Dutton (2010),
understand that the arts are not only a peripheral leisure
activity but mechanisms that generate many other forms
of social and cultural behavior, being present in areas as
diverse as fashion, ritual, religion, sport, social protest,
and ‘images’ of the ideal society. According to Tia
DeNora (2003), art (and music in particular) would be an
'active' and 'encouraging' force in society. Art would then
have structuring qualities in many contexts of everyday
life. 'Music' and 'society’, for example, would be coproduced entities. In this sense, art becomes a
meaningful heuristic source in the understanding of
society, due to its ability to generate perceptions,
images, landscapes, and objects. In other words, it
represents “the major way in which cultures
communicate with each other and through which ideas,
beliefs, possibilities, and ideals travel” (CLAMMER,
2014, p.8-9). Finally, it means that social agents not only
produce art; artwork are themselves also agents in our
world (DE LA FUENTE, 2010). The sociology of art
should then involve the study of social relations from the
objects that mediate social agency in an 'artistic'
manner. However, when these authors claim that art has
an 'active character', it does not mean that it is an
'uncaused cause' (CLAMMER, 2014), but rather a
dialectical relationship with social and historical factors together, co-producing aesthetic pleasure and
imaginaries, identities, and subjectivities - both
individually and collectively.
2019
society (in so far as we actually understand it) telling us
something about the nature of art?” (CLAMMER, 2014,
p.3).
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Here we have a second important point. If the
idea of the 'enlightened' artist, acting on his own, and
disintegrated from social relations is, from a sociological
point of view, clearly questionable, on the other hand,
the sociological analysis of art cannot forget individual
treatment, or personal, 'artistic creativity.' Although
bound to a context, the one who produces a 'work of art'
is someone who has an imagination (creativity) and
personality, and who embodies a 'worldview' that turns
out to be personal (his/her impressions) - not always
objective.
Although 'artistic experience' is nourished by the
constitutive elements of the 'social landscape,' in a
substantial part of cases, it signifies an ever new and
unique appropriation. In part, this explains those cases
where the same 'social causes' do not have the same
'aesthetic' and 'political' effects, as individuals react
differently to them. In other words, this means that in
'artistic terms,' not everything can be entirely explained in
'sociological terms’ (GONÇALVES, 2010). That is to say,
if the 'social approach' of the arts seeks especially a
sociological understanding of the 'artistic phenomenon',
and in so doing not only attempts to analyze the work
itself but focuses its attention more on the 'socio-artistic
action' - the set of relations that art maintains with
society, and with the individuals that compose it. On the
other side, the 'sociological analysis' cannot lose sight of
what is the artwork per se. In its validity and autonomy,
in its 'symbolic corporeality.' In short, we should not
refuse to examine art too in its own “image, vision and
imagination” (FRANCASTEL, 1987), in its always
“singular reality” (ADORNO, 2003).
This perspective also implies admitting that it is
not only the configuration of a society that produces a
particular artwork or artistic expression but also that the
artistic work itself can contribute to creating other
possible social configurations, more or less vigorous
and with a greater or lesser impact on societies. That is,
a ‘work of art’ can generate new tastes, ideas, attitudes,
and cultural movements.
Year
2019
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
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product of a series of causal determinations” (TANNER,
2010, p.242), and for this reason, she still has vital
power to create, shape, reinforce or weaken the
'emotional structures' of society. Not by chance 'social
imagination', in practice, arises from the invention of
utopias, futurisms, fictions and various other 'creative
activities' that are not taken very seriously by
'mainstream sociology.' The real reason for this
'disregard' for artistic objects is linked to the fact that the
'poetic' is a mode of expression, a form of truth and
knowledge, that clashes with technical-scientific
rationality. According to Heidegger (2002), in an
increasingly 'poor-in-thought' world, the 'poetic' (as
meditating thought) presents itself as the central means
of preparing the emergence of a new 'way of being' and
a future beyond the self-destructive civilization of
consumption and technology (as calculating thought).
Both 'types of thinking' are necessary to human
existence. But each represents a particular way of
'interpreting' the world. According to Adorno (2003, p.3738), for example, “in aesthetic appearance, the work of
art takes a stand before reality, which denies it, by
becoming a sui generis reality. Art protests against
reality through its objectification”. With this, the German
sociologist admits that 'art' is not to be confused with
reality (of the world), but it assumes a particular reality,
or its reality - materialized in work, in 'aesthetic
language.' Perhaps one of the reasons that prevented
sociology from systematically devoting itself to cinema,
in addition to the ‘anti-aesthetic attitude’ mentioned by
Eßbach (2001), was, according to Markus Schroer
(2012), that it does not see cinema as a ‘Useful source’
of research, but rather as a ‘competitor’, as they both
address the same subject: society.
Taking the argument further, Schroer (2012) will
state that in the few sociological works on cinema, much
attention has never been paid to the structural
similarities between the development of sociology and
cinema. However, in their efforts to explore society,
‘sociology’ and ‘cinema’ cannot be equated. Despite
their similarities, they differ fundamentally on the
following point:
“films thematize, visualize and condense social issues
and problems, but do not provide a comprehensive
theory about the functioning and structure of society and
do not want it at all” (SCHROER, 2012, p.21).
With a generative capacity, films can represent
some ‘social trends’ and provide a ‘valid picture’ of
contemporary social relations and customs. Thus, we
can assume that not only the ‘analysis of films’
represents an ‘analysis of society,’ but the films
themselves operate a ‘social analysis’. This view
suggests, therefore, that cinema is also capable of
'creating thoughts' and 'imaginaries.' In a kind of
‘philosophical experimentation,’ as Alain Badiou also
points out (2010, p.339):
© 2019 Global Journals
“Cinema speaks of courage, speaks of justice, speaks of
passion, speaks of betrayal. The great genres of cinema,
the most codified genres, such as melodrama, the
Western, are precisely ethical genres, that is, genres that
address humanity to propose moral mythologies”.
In these terms, cinema, similar to sociology, is
regularly expanding the 'visible zone,' making the
invisible visible, making the unimaginable imaginable.
While the film takes on this task with the help of the
'camera,' sociology creates a whole range of 'theories'
and 'empirical methods' - interviews, participant
observations, etc. - to address social reality and thereby
transcend the boundaries of what was considered
reasonable until then. Thus, much of what we know
about the society we live in, we know from the films and
the 'second life' they offer us on screen.
a) Cinema and 'moral standards'
Despite this not easy relationship, some
sociologists have seriously devoted themselves to the
study of cinema as a ‘social practice’ of enormous
sociological and aesthetic value in our society, in order
to understand how this ‘factory of illusions’ or ‘means of
enculturation’, as suggest Manfred Mai and Rainer
Winter (2006), informs us about who we are and who we
want to be, how we feel, what we have been dreaming
of, or what we should dream of. One of the first
approaches to a ‘sociological study of cinema’ came
from the pioneer work “Sociology of film” (1946) by
German sociologist Jacob Peter Mayer. In this book,
Mayer attempted to lay the foundations of what he
conceived as the ‘sociological assumptions’ of an
analysis of the film as a ‘social phenomenon’. However,
his interest in cinema arose specifically after another
study entitled “Max Weber and German Politics” (1944),
from which Mayer would suspect films' ability to shape
‘political opinions.’ His longing was especially to
understand the ‘emotional’ and ‘moral’ impacts of films
on his audience.
Thus, the 'sociology of film' proposed by Mayer
goes in the direction of the sociology of film as a ‘study
of reception.' In such a way, he sought to answer: 1)
which 'ethical values' films teach and how these values
pattern relate to the 'real norms' according to which
people live and 2) what is the relationship of both 'norms
of films' and 'real norms' in the construction of 'absolute
value' standards. Mayer concludes that it is impossible
to provide entertainment divorced from 'moral norms.'
Even if it is purely entertainment, the power of
visualization creates 'values.' That is why 'films' and
'moral standards' would be inseparable:
“The example of pre-Nazi Germany made me inclined to
believe that even so-called non-political films can become
an
instrument
for
shaping
political
opinions.
Consequently, I am less interested in the intricate
psychological mechanisms which seem to underlie film
reactions than in those structural features which may help
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
“Whatever views he may have on these alien modes of
existence will be based on what he has seen in the
b) Institutional analysis
Another influential sociological approach to the
study of cinema came in 1970 with the publication of the
book “Towards a Sociology of the Cinema” by English
sociologist Ian Charles Jarvie. In this study, the author
proposed an essay on the structure and operation of
cinema as a ‘entertainment industry.’ Thus, he sought to
answer questions such as 1) who makes movies, how
and why?; 2) who watches films and why?; and 3) How
do we learn and evaluate a film? In this sense, he
anchored his proposal on three main bases: industry,
audience and values in the content of film experience. In
seeking to think of cinema as “one social institution
among many others” (JARVIE, 2013, p. Xiv), the concern
related to the exclusively aesthetic criterion became then
secondary. Consequently, this allowed sociology to
© 20 19 Global Journals
2019
In this sense, the thesis of cinema as a mere
'reflection of society,' and of its 'mentality,' seems to
maintain a simplistic and mechanical relationship
between 'reality' and 'fiction.' However, the film
representation, when making use of reality (itself already
processed and organized), imposes its visualization on
a theme in a concentrated and precise manner. In doing
this, films return to reality, providing 'interpretative
patterns' that can serve to process and classify this
same theme. Thus, not only derive from a lived world,
but films also play a generative role, influencing our
ideas about what it was like in the past and what it is
today. The most sociologically relevant question here, it
seems to me, this one that seeks to know: Who can see
what? What can be shown? What hasn't the viewer seen
yet? How far can he go? What is seen and shown and
what remains hidden and contained is how 'power' flows
through images and their 'dreams.'
However, if Mayer acknowledged that “what is
really important to the sociologist is the discovery and
isolation of the implicit attitudes of a film, the general
assumptions on which the conduct of the characters is
based and the treatment of plot situations” (MAYER,
1946, p. 170), there is very little space in the 'sociology
of film' which he proposed for the film itself as 'art'. It
offers us nothing about the study of 'character conduct,'
and the 'film language' is not considered at any point in
the book. Thus, Mayer does not present an
'interpretative basis of the film' as a finished work of art,
but is limited to the study of the impact of particular films
on their audiences - and their 'moral standards.' Within
the jargon I expounded above, we might say that Mayer
then takes an 'externalist approach' in his 'sociology of
film,' in which the work of art in its aesthetic configuration
is, to some extent, set aside.
Year
The 'cinema experience' would then turn out to
be a 'ritualistic experience' in which the 'myth' (of the
fictional world) would not merely be a 'story told onscreen,' but also a 'lived reality.' According to Mayer, that
would explain the contemporary yearning for films:
“since the traditional structures of life are uprooted and
about to disappear altogether, the modern moviegoer
seeks mystical participation in screen events” (MAYER,
1946, p.19). It is through the films that the public would
find the 'totality' of an 'apparent life' in which traditional
institutions seem no longer able to offer. However, and
here seems to be the essential point of author's
contribution, although the film is presented
indiscriminately to all members of the audience, the
subjects operate the viewing mechanism (Vorstellung)
and perception (Wahrnehmung) individually.
What is “watched” is the same for each
individual, although what is 'visualized' (through
'imagination') is unique to each one. How then to explain
their different impacts on them? According to Mayer,
'memory' would play a central role in this process.
Indeed, only a 'study of memory' and 'things
remembered' in a film could give stimulating indications
of the 'effects of cinema' and the 'role' it plays in the lives
of the public. Although we have here the appeal of the
'fantasy of the past,' it is nonetheless a fantasy that has
a deep 'real feeling.' That is why the relationship
between 'real' and 'fantasy' in cinema cannot be
simplistically analyzed. For, according to Mayer, to the
extent that we all have 'ideas' we live generally in a
'fantasy world' where the “ideal” is a goal for which we
engage in everyday life. In this way, the "ideals" and the
"fantasies" - often presented in the movies - are closely
related to life, and therefore are a necessary stimulus to
action, providing a broader horizon of experience,
conceptions of life and behavior. An example of would
be the spontaneous reactions to certain movies: how to
have nightmares and fear of sleeping alone. Or,
nowadays, the many cases of actors assaulted on the
street for being confused with the characters they play
(MENEZES, 2017). What this seems to show us is that
despite its 'fictional' character in content, we often
experience the fiction as 'real' in form.
Thus, in addition to having a significant
influence on personal and collective 'emotions' and
'behavior', cinema can also be a determining factor in
creating one's individual 'outlook' on life - his plans for
the future, his ideas about what kind of life is best, and
his conception of the ways in which people from
different backgrounds of his conduct behave. In many
cases, films even portray a type of society with which
the viewer is unfamiliar, and about which he often lacks
many other sources of information. Like this,
cinema. It may happen, moreover, that he is led to
compare the life depicted on the screen with his own life,
to the disadvantage of the latter, and the result may be
dissatisfaction, unrest, aspirations, ambition, and so on”
(MAYER, 1946, p.169).
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Global Journal of Human Social Science ( C ) Volume XIX Issue V Version I
us to explain the sociological implications of films”
(MAYER, 1946, p.267).
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
Year
2019
involve in its studies not only the so-called ‘good film’
but, above all, those films considered ‘trash’ because,
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“The cinema is – sociologically, at least – a mass art; and
it would be silly to pretend that mass taste is very high, or
that the average product reaches above mass taste to
any high standard of excellence. Thus, my defense in
discussing trash is complete: chiefly, I am doing
sociology. Yet I wish to defend my study aesthetically too:
although I confess to highbrow biases, I am critical of the
view that the average good entertainment movie (‘trash’,
in the broadest sense) is of no aesthetic interest; it is one
of the most pleasurable entertainments I know and, loathe
though I am to say this, occasionally it even satisfies
highbrow criteria: it can be informative, well done,
sophisticated. It is snobbish, then, to ignore mass cinema
either as a sociological or as an aesthetic phenomenon”
(2013, p.xv).
Jarvie's proposal has helped point out the
shortcomings of some authors more concerned with
'elevation' than with 'understanding' of the cinematic
phenomenon as a 'social phenomenon.' Thus, by
considering, in the apprehension of the cinema, its
involving "virtues," but also its admitted "failures," he
believed to assume the position of a ‘participating
observer.’ Whatever the use of critical language,
analysts should not judge a film image for ‘moral
reasons.’ In this way, Jarvie sought to restore its status
as a ‘social art’ by analyzing how ‘social character’ can
affect cinematic art and how its ‘artistic effects’ can
affect society.
By assuming cinema is as an art, and the
function of art is to enrich our experience through
entertainment, like it or not, there are a variety of ways of
entertaining - although not all of them can be
considered art. However, the assumption that cinema
needs an 'intellectual justification' would insult the
medium and reflect a lack of confidence in its value and
importance. Jarvie also wants to denounce the view that
the attitudes, values, and interests of their creators are
conditioned by the social context in which they live and
work. This experience leads us to ‘label’ certain types of
films, and since all labels can be understood as
‘statements,’ in the latter circumstance they can also be
evaluated in terms of ‘true’ or ‘false.’ The greatest
absurdity this reading can lead us to is to judge the
merits of films in ‘moral terms,’ or from a judgment of
whether or not they lack a greater ‘sense of reality.’
For example, this discussion can be
contemporized and seems useful to understand
contemporary African film productions, in their 'new
forms and aesthetics,' as Manthia Diawara (2010) points
out. The emergence in recent years of a popular and
mainstream language in mainland cinematography,
especially in the wake of low-cost Nollywood
productions, as popular video production in Nigeria is
known, challenges the idea that African cinema should
be “committed,” “serious” and with substantial “critical”
and social content. However, what productions such as
© 2019 Global Journals
those of Nollywood denounce are a profound and
inevitable transnationalization of cinema, as well as
African cultural and social diversity. Although considered
of 'less aesthetic value' by many critics, such
productions carry importance that must be underlined,
because, despite their lack of 'seriousness' and 'political
engagement', according to Noah Tsika (2015, p.1011):"Nollywood films tend to unravel a multidimensional
and heterogeneous landscape of Africa, far from the
Hollywood model that portrays a mixture of relentless
sameness". Besides, these most popular types of
movies also serve to raise, according to Nwachukwu
Frank Ukadike (2014, p.xv), “a series of questions about
production values, artistic and aesthetic trends,
formidable challenges for viewer issues and broader
perspectives for reading films.”
Admittedly, the purpose of Jarvie's approach is
to map an 'institution' that materializes in the 'film
industry' and nourishes the needs of a particular
'audience.' His attempt to find out how this 'social
valuation' of cinema takes place is, therefore, by the
'institutional
analysis'
that
follows
“progress
chronologically through the manufacture of a film from
conception and production, to sales, to distribution, to
viewing and experience, to evaluation” (JARVIE, 2013,
p.14, our translation). Only from this mapping, it is
possible to identify the relative position of films
concerning other social regularities in a given society.
Thus, in Jarvie's view, cinema would be both a 'social
occasion' and an 'aesthetic occasion,' and these two
aspects would be interconnected.
c) Structural Conditions
From a different perspective, German
sociologist Dieter Prokop, in "Soziologie des Films"
(1982), will make a direct critique of the 'functionalist'
postulates in film studies, specifically his sense that the
'film industry' is a “neutral medium” in shaping public
preferences; and the thesis that the public stands as
'unitary' in front of a mass directed by a 'collective
unconscious.' About this last idea, Prokop sought to
belie what, for many theorists, would represent the
essence of cinema: an appeal to the 'collective soul' of a
society. This idea was associated with the 'mirror
metaphor' propagated especially by another German
theorist, Siegfried Kracauer (1966), for whom films from
a nation would reflect its 'mindset' more directly than
other artistic media. First, because the film production
unit would incorporate a kind of 'mix of interests' and
'heterogeneous tendencies,' excluding arbitrary material
handling and suppressing individual peculiarities. And
secondly, because the films would be directed and
interested in an 'anonymous crowd', fulfilling their
'unconscious desires,'. Therefore,
“What films reflect are not so much explicit credos as
psychological dispositions those deep layers of collective
mentality which extend more or less below the dimension
d) Interpretative Analysis
Unlike the authors cited above, French
sociologist Pierre Sorlin will propose, in his book
“Sociologie du Cinéma” (1985), a “method of
interpretation” of films that attempts to account for the
symbolic possibilities that this form of art, and
entertainment, provides us - and that can also serve us
as a source of understanding of social history. Thus, in
Sorlin's methodology, it is assumed that films are never
the substitute or reflection of the society that gave rise to
them, but in themselves, the thing both meaningful and
meaningful - respecting, thus, the autonomy of the
artistic object (the film) in its own ‘materiality.’ It means
that, for Sorlin, a film would not be a "record" of social
reality, nor would it be a "mirror" of a "collective soul" - a
vague term used by Kracauer and other authors.
Instead, films would operate an ‘imaginary retranslation’
of a particular social formation, or of a specific historical
period.
Sorlin believed that films could be 'revealing' of
the social world, but he did not want to incur in his
analysis in a 'social determinism.' That is why, for him,
the film, as 'social staging' rather than 'reflex,' would be
the result of 1) a selection (what is shown and what is
hidden) and 2) a redistribution (how the story is
structured). If the 'context', in some interpretations,
would always come from the analysis of the 'social
conditions' of the constitution of works of art, actors,
© 20 19 Global Journals
Year
With that, Kracauer made a very tempting
invitation: since the films 'reflect reality', we should look
into this 'mirror.' For Prokop, however, sociologists who
follow such an invitation would be unaware of its
implications. Especially assuming the 'collective
unconscious' as an absolute conditioner of film
productions, they would reproduce nothing more,
nothing less than the 'self-image' that the film industry
provides about itself according to its discourses and
principles. It would have been the case for many
readings that attempted to explain the success of US
films, considered in some of these analyzes to be a
product of the co-elaboration of them by the public. In
this way, the success of the films was simplistically
explained by somehow manifesting the 'character' of the
American public. It was from this social unconscious
that its success and acceptance by society would
come. For, according to the supporters of this kind of
thinking, “the film would be a collective work for the
totality of the people” (PROKOP, 1986, p. 44).
Thus, both the American 'functionalists' and the
Kracauerian 'German school' were characterized by
excluding 'structural factors' from their analysis of film
productions. And, as far as the representatives of the
latter current are concerned, along with the conception
that the film would be a 'mirror of the collective
unconscious,' there was also a critique of the 'ideology
of the masses', which brought new critical-cultural
implications to the debate. As also signaled by Jarvie,
there is often a tendency to want to condemn mass
culture as 'reality falsifier'. Thus, for some authors of this
current, the 'unmasking' of the ideologies behind the
films would become a task of the analyst - an attitude
that approached, in some respects, the 'orthodox
Marxist' current.
The objective of the Kracauerian school was to
applaud films that were 'free of ideology', as he believed
to have been 'Italian neorealism,' without realizing that
this cinematic movement also had certain socioeconomic and ideological assumptions. According to
Prokop, for example, Italian neorealism, recognized for
its critique and social documentation, had the following
assumptions 1) It was a group of filmmakers formed
during the period of fascism, oriented towards criticism
and social denunciation, in a political context which,
despite their regrets, guaranteed relative freedom of
expression for these artists; 2) the polyphonic structure
of the film industry, dominated by small producers, not
an oligopolistic industry. It was this context, therefore,
that had allowed the 'emergence' of the so-called
'neorealism' and it would be his change, in turn, that
would also make this cinematic trend end.
In that sense, what explained the emergence
and decline of neorealism was not the 'collective soul' of
society, but the political, economic, and social
development of the Italian film industry itself. Thus,
Prokop guided the analytical axis of his study into three
fundamental aspects: production, consumption, and
analysis of the final product (the film). About
'production', he analyzes what he called the 'structural
conditions' of film production - the film industry itself. In
the 'consumption' aspect, he considers complementary
elements to the process of film production, focusing on
the historical development of the sale of 'film
merchandise.' In relation to 'product analysis', he seeks
to perform a process of 'film interpretation.' Therefore,
his 'analytical scheme' was intended to move from the
most general to the most particular level of analysis.
Dieter Prokop's sociology of the film is an
influential contribution to the development of an analysis
of the structural conditions of cinema, as it attempts to
account for the socio-historical structures that promote
the rise and decline of certain film tendencies without
falling into idealism and functionalist thinking. However,
as regards the interpretation of the “cinematic object,”
we should some limitations on its proposal. Since, while
sometimes privileging 'film analysis,' its 'methods' of
analysis are underdeveloped and still quite incipient, it is
not clear exactly what their 'interpretative bases' are
about 'what' we should analyze, 'why' and 'how' in films.
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Global Journal of Human Social Science ( C ) Volume XIX Issue V Version I
of consciousness [...] In recording the visible world
whether current reality or an imaginary universe films
therefore provide clues to hidden mental processes”
(KRACAUER, 1966, p.6-7).
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Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
Art, Cinema and Society: Sociological Perspectives
production, structures, etc., in his scheme, the social
meaning it is understood as inherent in the 'work's
discourse', being sought and reconstructed from the
work itself, as he clarifies in this passage:
Year
2019
“We have to take the film itself, dedicate ourselves to
discovering in the combinations of images, words and
sounds the most clues to be able to follow some:
precisely those that allow us to return to the historical
moment by clarifying the exterior (social exchanges) by
the interior (the micro-universe of the film)” (SORLIN,
1985, p.38)
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Global Journal of Human Social Science ( C ) Volume XIX Issue V Version I
26
Accordingly, Sorlin argues that films would not
be able to "open" a window to the world. Rather, they
would filter, reinterpret, and redistribute some of their
aspects into the inner universe of their stories. And this
would happen for a simple reason: if what is called the
"outside world" were determinant, the study of films
would become useless, because knowing this "world"
would be enough to comprehend what films perform.
However, just as in a structural arrangement, not
everyone occupies the same place, or is bound by the
same factors, films would surpass their “outside world”,
their “social context” and the “reality itself” in which they
arise, insofar as it transcribes, modifies, denies, or
confesses it. Thus, instead of mere “copies,” films would
represent, in short, a set of propositions about a given
social formation. It would then be up to the analyst to
identify how these propositions are “put on the scene”
through codifications proper to film language.
However, obstacles begin to arise when asking
'from what angle' to focus and analyze a film. According
to Sorlin, the analyst will inevitably have to deal with
some reading difficulties. First, because there is a
weight of affectivity. Although the 'readings' of the films
are rarely absolutely false, we tend to be most sensitive
to what we already know and, therefore, are fixated on
'small points' when it comes to a domain that is familiar
to us. That is because, "in most cases, the reception
given to a film, at least in its first view, is governed by
fundamentally affective reactions" (SORLIN, 1985, p.32).
In this sense, all those later interventions to what was
seen look to want to find, in some way, 'justifications' for
the emotion initially felt.
A second difficulty would be associated with
false evidence of the images. It is well known that
images, in comparison with the written text, seem to
have among us a kind of fetishized 'authority.' As they
say, image 'speaks for itself', it 'shows', and that is
enough. However, this profound reverence for what is
'visible,' and even more so for what 'moves,' only
“convinces us because it conforms to a prior knowledge
that somehow comes to authenticate” (SORLIN, 1985,
p.33). Thus, the 'informative value' often attributed to
images depends less on their 'content' than on a
'particular attitude' toward iconographic material. In other
words, the temptation to want to see 'the truth' in images
would overshadow the fact that they are not 'neutral
© 2019 Global Journals
images.' We have then faced with two extreme ways 1)
the one that seeks in the film what is purely
'documentary'; and 2) the one that considers them as a
'set of signs,' in which the insertion of each element
imposes new meanings.
It is now clear that instead of being the film
something to be confused with the 'real', what is at stake
in Sorlin's proposal is the understanding of the
'constructive character' of his images, as this will allow
us to understand the 'value foundations' that govern the
constitution of their narratives, the choices, and
positions of their characters, their place in the cinematic
space and the unfolding of the plot. In this movement,
cinema no longer appears to be a 'unified set' and
opens the possibility of thinking society in what it
reveals, but only in a partial way. Thus, we should
analyze a film, first leaving aside what we know about it,
its 'other discourses,' to always evaluate it in its
particularities. Acting in this way, it would be possible to
arrive at a ‘thick interpretation’ of the films, not to 'fit'
them into a 'prior knowledge', but to understand, by their
peculiar and unique characteristics, how the
codifications (of the social world) are reconstituted in the
construction of their senses.
Regarding the narrative aspect, Sorlin identifies
an elementary texture that permeates, with some
variants and unfoldings, the vast majority of films. Firstly,
its system would involve 'struggles' and 'challenges,'
inscribed in a temporality oriented between a 'beginning'
and an 'end'. In the fight, there would be an obstacle to
be overcome, in the 'challenge' an absence to be
supplied. And between the ‘obstacle’ or ‘absence’ and
its ‘resolution’, there would be a lapse, a 'beginning' and
an 'end.' Besides, the narrative film necessarily has
'identifiable characters', which can be individuals, but
also entire groups and communities. However, the
specificity of the film lies in the use of different means of
expression to tell its stories. For example, sounds
intervene as signs; music indicates repetition, an
accompaniment of a situation; Silence can help to
underline a crucial moment, and it may also happen that
the film builds its aesthetic conventions. It is these
elements, therefore, that, in an orchestrated manner,
channel and guides their message to the viewer.
Based on this, the film, as we imagine it, only
exists in the 'act of reading,' in the process of enjoyment,
in the confrontation with our 'hypotheses.' There would
be no predetermined 'meaning,' but multiple possible
lines of meaning. That is why reading a single movie
may be different for each individual in each specific
context. This idea leads us to an important conclusion:
that we do not see the world (and the movie) 'as it is' but
as we 'are.' In Sorlin's words (1985, p.58), “we perceive
beings and objects through our habits, our hopes, our
mentality, that is, through the ways our environment
structures the essential (what is essential for us), about
the accessory”. We can then say that what is (and the
IV.
Conclusion
Throughout this paper, it has been possible,
albeit briefly, to explore a range of ways in which
analysis of arts and cinema can provide insights into
social processes. Besides, it has also become clear
how sociological orientation helps us indicate to what
extent films can exercise some 'hegemony' in society by
providing existing, central and 'meaning patterns,' 'moral
values,' and reinforcing ideologies, exclude opposites or
marginalize them. Thus, when we talk about 'sociology
of film,' we want to reinforce the idea that it is not an
'aesthetic appropriation' but, in fact, an analysis of the
'social dimension' of this captivating artwork.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
References Références Referencias
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way it is) 'visible' to everyone at one time is nothing
random. What is 'seen' or 'hidden' in the background
would respond to a need, or rejection, of social
formation. In this interpretation, we see only what we are
'capable' or 'can' (we are 'authorized' to) see. And
cinema, in turn, would function as a 'repertoire' and
'producer' of these 'authorized' or 'forbidden' images. In
other words, showing, on the one hand, fragments of
the 'real' (of the 'perceived' and 'reconstituted' life of
those who produce the films), that the public 'accepts'
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images' on the iconographic panorama of a society
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analysis of the arrangement of the various visual and
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groups. It is these 'negotiations' and 'filters' that are
interesting to analyze in the 'structuring' of films, in order
to identify the 'lines of force' that cross the different
'social formations' at a given time - in the struggle to
define what it can be 'visible' or perceptually 'real' in our
eyes.
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