EPISODE · Mar 2, 2026 · 18 MIN
Memory as the Killer: Decoding Hiroshima mon amour
from The Inaccurate Witness: Memory, Trauma, and Cinema in Hiroshima mon amour · host reviveramesh
Is Hiroshima mon amour a romance or a horror movie? In today’s Deep Dive, we step inside the "projection booth of the mind" to analyze Alain Resnais’ 1959 cinematic landmark. Written by the legendary Marguerite Duras, this film challenged the world to look at trauma, memory, and the scars of war through a radical new lens.In this episode, we explore:The "Internal Cinema": Why Resnais wasn't interested in linear stories, but in the chaotic nature of consciousness.The Psychoanalytic Lens: Applying Freud and Lacan to understand the "talking cure" and the "horror of oblivion."Sheets of Time: How Henri Bergson’s philosophy explains the film’s seamless shifts between 1950s Japan and occupied France.The Digital Dilemma: A modern reflection on whether it’s possible to heal in an age where the internet never allows us to forget.Whether you're a film student or a casual cinephile, join us as we unpack why "to heal is to betray" and how this 65-year-old film predicts our modern struggle with memory.To view the visual evidence and theoretical materials discussed in this series, including the feline witnesses, symbolic objects, architectural spaces, and philosophical frameworks identified across the film, look online: Alain Resnais (Dir.), Hiroshima mon amour (1959), Argos Films. Feline stills archived and documented by Cinema Cats (2017): cinemacats.com/hiroshima-mon-amour-1956/ — Criterion Collection essay and supplementary materials: criterion.com/films/563-hiroshima-mon-amour This series employs a methodology of Diachronic Visual and Psychoanalytic Film Analysis to identify the structural encodings through which Resnais and Duras organize historical and personal catastrophe into a grammar of objects, spaces, animal witnesses, and mnemonic gestures. Listeners are invited to look beyond the film's celebrated philosophical dialogue to what lives at the margins of the frame, below the threshold of language, and outside the Symbolic order of human grief and narration — and to ask what it means that we cannot stop returning to the places that destroyed us. Research and curation by Ramakrishnan Ramesh. Produced via NotebookLM. 🎙️ The Inaccurate Witness: Memory, Trauma, and Cinema in Hiroshima mon amour
What this episode covers
Is Hiroshima mon amour a romance or a horror movie? In today’s Deep Dive, we step inside the "projection booth of the mind" to analyze Alain Resnais’ 1959 cinematic landmark. Written by the legendary Marguerite Duras, this film challenged the world to look at trauma, memory, and the scars of war through a radical new lens. In this episode, we explore: The "Internal Cinema": Why Resnais wasn't interested in linear stories, but in the chaotic nature of consciousness. The Psychoanalytic Lens: A...
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Memory as the Killer: Decoding Hiroshima mon amour
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