20/06/2025

The Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars: Bárbara Bergamaschi

The next session of our Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars will be led by Bárbara Bergamaschi (NOVA University Lisbon), who will talk about "Eroticism, Formlessness, and Death in Tscherkassky's Cinematic Hauntology".

Abstract This paper examines the work of Austrian avant-garde filmmaker Peter Tscherkassky
through the lens of Georges Bataille’s concepts of l’informe (the formless), eroticism, and expenditure. Positioned within the poetics of obsolescence and the broader hauntological turn in contemporary experimental cinema, Tscherkassky reappropriates archival material not to reconstruct a lost cinematic past, but to perform a kind of aesthetic vivisection. His films operate in the ruins of the medium, embracing crisis, decay, glitch, and spectrality as central aesthetic strategies.

Drawing on Thomas Elsaesser’s idea of "cinema of obsolescence" and Mark Fisher’s hauntology—where memory returns as technological residue—Tscherkassky’s work can be seen as a form of necropoetic cinema: a practice that resists the necropolitics of late capitalism through a sensual engagement with media death. The poetics of obsolescence embodies a passionate attachment to "dead" media — degraded, decaying, or contaminated — infusing the notion of cinephilia with new meaning. Rather than preserving or restoring filmic heritage to its pristine form, he enacts what Georges Didi-Huberman terms a "heuristics of anachronism".

Films such as Outer Space (1999) and Instructions for a Light and Sound Machine (2005) exemplify this approach. By destabilizing cinematic classical form and narrative teleology, Tscherkassky revives Bataille’s radical aesthetics - particularly the embrace of excess, rupture, and the transgression of classical mimesis. In this way, his cinema stages a confrontation with the medium’s material limits and historical canonical ghosts.

In an inflection with Bataille’s excessive, anti-axiomatic thought, much of Tscherkassky’s oeuvre is parricidal in nature - a violent gesture toward cinematic forebears that paradoxically honors them. Repeatedly slaying the ghosts of the canon, he radically denies (while simultaneously resurrecting) the traditional narrative structures from which his work descends. He is, in this regard, an iconoclast par excellence.

Ultimately, Tscherkassky’s cinema does not seek a return to a melancholic restorative golden age of cinema, but instead proposes a necromantic cinephilia: a love for damaged images and spectral presence that foregrounds the cinematic language itself. His films propose a genealogical attempt to re-enchant images long since pacified by narrative teleology and the regime of representation of aristotelian poetics. His anachronistic and extemporaneous cinema articulates both a response to, and a symptom of, the crisis of contemporary cinematic experience — an encounter with cinematic language at its very limit.


Bárbara Bergamaschi Novaes, Brasília, 1989. She holds a PhD in Literature from PUC-Rio (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro), with a doctoral exchange period at the CITAR- School of Arts of the Portuguese Catholic University in OPorto. Her doctoral thesis focused on the cinema of Peter Tscherkassky. In 2012, she studied film at Université Paris VIII. Bárbara is a film critic affiliated with ABRACCINE/FIPRESCI (The International Federation of Film Critics). She has published articles in several specialized outlets, including Revista Aniki, La Furia Umana, Doc-Online, Significação, Revista Cinética, O Estado de São Paulo, and the Cinema Blog of the Moreira Salles Institute, among others. She is currently the Science Communication Manager at ICNOVA and a visiting lecturer in the Department of Communication at NOVA University Lisbon, where she resides.

The session is hybrid and will be held on July 30, 2025, at 15h00 WEST, at NOVA FCSH (room B201) and online, via Microsoft Teams.

Note that to receive information about joining the meeting online, it is mandatory to register here.

Film and Death
Film and Death
  • About
    • Background and key aims
    • Overview
    • Team
    • Advisory Board
    • Related projects
    • References
  • Film-Phil Seminars
  • Outreach
    • Conferences
    • Reading Groups
    • Media
  • Publications
    • Articles
    • Books
  • VIDEOS
  • Blog
  • Job openings
  • Contact

Blog

Tags
Alain Resnais Alfred Hitchcock Animation anime Anna Elsner Anti-image Architecture and Cinema Bande Dessinée Bárbara Bergamaschi Béla Tarr Bernd Herzogenrath Bill Morrison Book Discussion Call for Papers Calls Catherine Malabou Catherine Wheatley Chantal Akerman Christine Reeh-Peters Cinema Journal of Philosophy Cinema Studies CJPMI Conferences Corey P. Cribb Cristóbal Escobar David Ferragut David H. Fleming David Lynch Davide Sisto Death and Technology Death-Image Deleuze Derrida Disappearence End-of-life care Events Farshad Zahedi Félix Guattari Female Biopic FIlm Film and Death Film Philosophy Film Studies Film-Phil Seminar Gilles Deleuze Grief Gülce Zeynep Bektaş Ingrid Rodrigues Gonçalves Jacques Derrida Jaime Pena Jakob A. Nilsson James Williams Jamieson Webster Japan Jean-Marc Rochette Jonathan Glazer Kanen Barad Lacrimae Rerum Lucas Ferraço Nassif Lucy Bolton Manoel de Oliveira Marc Cerisuelo Marco Grosoli Media Studies Michael Cholbi Michael Haneke Mortality Muhammad Haris Nélio Conceição New Queer Cinema Outi Hakola Paolo Taviani Patrícia Castello Branco Patricio Guzmán Pedro Inock Philosophy of Death Publications Queer Post-Cinema Queer Studies Reading Group Robert Sinnerbrink Salomé Lamas Seán Cubbit Slavoj Žižek Slow Cinema Stanley Cavell Star Biopic Susana Viegas Swan Songs Testament Films Thanatology Thomas E. Wartenberg Thomas Lamarre Time-Image Vasco Baptista Marques Video Visiting Researcher Walter Benjamin
24/09/2025

The Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars: Seán Cubbit

The next session of our Film-Phil Lisbon Seminars will be led by Seán Cubbit (University of Melbourne), who will talk about “Immortal Cinema”. Abstract We have always been told that everyone dies alone. A medium that tends to privilege individuals, film has tended to focus on these lonely deaths of isolated individuals, often treating them […]
15/07/2025

Book Discussion: Queer Post-Cinema, by Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky

On September 25, 2025, a discussion will take place about the book Queer Post-Cinema: Reinventing Resistance (ICI Berlin Press 2025), by Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky. The discussion will be held in English, in the auditorium C1 of NOVA FCSH (Campus Av. de Berna) and will feature the author, Susana Viegas and Iracema Dulley. This event is included […]
26/09/2025

Marco Grosoli at the University of Évora

On October 2-4, PRAXIS (Center of Philosophy, Politics and Culture of the Universty of Évora) will host the international congress Jacques Derrida e a Desconstrução, revisiting some of Derrida’s deconstruction most relevant contributions to contemporary thought. Marco Grosoli will present a paper titled “Beyond Deconstruction: Malabou’s plasticity in Manoel de Oliveira’s Vale Abraão and Espelho […]
26/09/2025

Susana Viegas at the XI Encuentro Ibérico de Estética (University of Salamanca)

On October 23-25, the University of Salamanca will host the XI Encuentro Ibérico de Estética, dedicated to the theme «Ni esto ni aquello. Espacios de lo ambiguo en las artes y la Estética». Susana Viegas will be present with a paper titled “Lazarean Characters in Alice Rohrwacher’s “Happy as Lazzaro” and “La Chimera””. Alice Rohrwacher’s […]
25/09/2025

New article by Marco Grosoli

A new open-access article by Marco Grosoli is out now, having been published in Arts as part of the Special Issue Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films. The article “Wrapping Up “Through the Eyes of Those Who Are No Longer”: Paolo Taviani’s Leonora addio (2022)” is available here. In […]
25/09/2025

New book chapter by Susana Viegas on Derrida and Film Studies

A new book chapter by FILM AND DEATH’s PI Susana Viegas is out now. Titled “Derrida on Cinema’s Spectral Images: Time, Repetition, and Belief”, this new article is published in Derrida and Film Studies, edited by Kamil Lipiński and Andrzej Marzec (Brill, 2025). This chapter by Susana Viegas begins as a meditation on the relationship […]
1234…27
Hosted by
Supported by

Funded by the European Union (ERC, FILM AND DEATH, 101088956). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

DESIGN