Abstract


 While technological advancement and artistic creations have amazingly diversified the (re-)presentation of images, infinite image proliferation becomes an irresistible trend. To resist the subsuming power of the image-laden society, the renewed perceptions and interpretations of the image presentation are explored both in artistic presentation and in literary writing. Point Omega is a convergence of such an attempt. The paper explores how the time-featured image in Point Omega activates new idea, sensuous responses, and self-perception. Point Omega represents Douglas Gordon’s 24 Hour Psycho which is an adaptation of Hitchcock’s Psycho. By reframing the running speed to two frames a second, Gordon drastically challenges the familiar recognition and interpretation. Writing about Gordon’s work, DeLillo stresses the emergence of various perceptions, imaginations, and association in the video-watching process. No longer resting on the cultural critique on the media society as what has been done in his earlier works, DeLillo marks time as the prominent variable for the emergence of the new and the unknown.
 
 Moreover, DeLillo’s image representation highlights the physical condition which is both an essential feature of Gordon’s video installation and the hinge for DeLillo’s distinct writing. For one thing, the emergence of the new and the unthought lies in the interweaving between the spectator’s awareness and imagination of the physicality and his responses to the reframed image. For another, the physicality of the time-reframed image resonates with the desert underscored in the main story. In the story, DeLillo contends about the relation between the time-featured space and the transient self. The desert mirroring the time-featured image renders the distinctive conditions for different self-perception. Hence, the image representation in Point Omega proffers the condition for the unexpected and unthought, reconfigures the selfhood, and, significantly, enacts the alternative writing which trespasses from the filmic to the fictional, from the visual to the verbal.

Highlights

  • Point Omega (2010) furthers Don DeLillo’s investigation of alternative image representation and shows his attempt in exploring new possibilities of writing

  • Image proliferation and dissemination become an irresistible trend, marking an image-laden world featured by the simulation of reality or the nullification of meaning

  • How does the reframed image dissolve the original meaning of the image and self-recognition? To understand the reason for the meaning dissolution and the renewed self-recognition, the questions this paper aims to explore are: What idea of time is embedded in Gordon’s and DeLillo’s image representation? How does the image elicit the unidentifiable and elusive selfhood in DeLillo’s novel? What is the significance of DeLillo’s representing 24 Hour Psycho in terms of writing? The following analysis will be divided into four parts

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Point Omega (2010) furthers Don DeLillo’s investigation of alternative image representation and shows his attempt in exploring new possibilities of writing. As a writer who takes great interest in the power of image, DeLillo’ writing shows his constant exploration of the image (re)presentation His early works examine how image rigidifies the social configuration and self-perception. DeLillo enfolds different means of image (re-)presentation from the visual (the movie) to the empirical (the videowork installation) to the verbal (the novel) and makes a new terrain in image representation in fiction. To understand the reason for the meaning dissolution and the renewed self-recognition, the questions this paper aims to explore are: What idea of time is embedded in Gordon’s and DeLillo’s image representation? The fourth part examines how DeLillo’s temporally-reframed image intriguingly mirrors the time-imbricated space in the main story of the novel

IMAGE IN DELILLO’S WRITING
TIME IN THE REFRAMED IMAGE
THE TIME-REFRAMED IMAGE MIRRORED IN SPACE
CONCLUSION
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