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Beskrivelse
Nearly three-quarters of a century of criticism - much of it misguided, sometimes even wrong-headed - has obscured a crucial facet of D.W. Griffith's accomplishment in "Intolerance." This original and lucid study argues that "Intolerance" is, like Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness," a proto-modernist text. Both works exhibit an ahistoric consciousness of disorder, destruction and skepticism, and reflect - to different degrees - the aesthetic experimentalism of the early 20th century. Through a close analysis of Griffith's film and its manifold affinities with Conrad's tale - and more cursorily with the works of other exponents of modernism in the traditional arts - the author demonstrates that, contrary to the conventional criticisms of "Intolerance" as a cluttered, disjointed text, the film's eccentric form and unruliness are among the vital components of its meaning and modernity.