Abstract

The queer filmmaker, artist, activist, and gardener, Derek Jarman, when diagnosed with AIDS in 1986, turned to what may seem like an unlikely form of political and aesthetic expression. His eventually world-famous garden allowed him symbolically and aesthetically to address the political issues with which he had always passionately concerned himself: environmental degradation, nuclear expansion, homophobia, consumer culture, and AIDS. Each of these issues entailed a crisis of political response in the late twentieth century, and in the garden, Jarman addresses this crisis on a number of levels, but always as elements of a terminal condition without any prospect of a “cure.” Using literary analysis to examine the garden and Jarman’s writing about it, in addition to a cultural studies perspective to place these topics in a broad context, this essay undertakes a study of the garden’s codes and effects. Consulting Sarah Ensor and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, both of whom describe terminality as a temporality with its own powers and ways of being, I focus on Jarman’s efforts in what he acknowledges as a damaged, post-natural landscape. Rather than seeing crisis only as a moment of emergency, Jarman imagines other more reflective responses to crisis that, I argue, complement more interventionist approaches.

Highlights

  • AIDS in 1986, turned to what may seem like an unlikely form of political and aesthetic expression

  • Using literary analysis to examine the garden and Jarman’s writing about it, in addition to a cultural studies perspective to place these topics in a broad context, this essay undertakes a study of the garden’s codes and effects

  • “Terminality” generally refers to an incurable human medical condition; the eco-critic Sarah Ensor (Ensor 2016) has recently used it to describe the current state of the natural world: irremediably damaged, but still alive

Read more

Summary

Garden ona the death of his friend

Heelegy: passionately recallsfucking their sexual a rare connection, rare element in heterosexual “All night youconnection, on the floor ofelement. It forms part of a conversation about the rarely simple relation well as the joy he takes in planting It forms part of a conversation about the rarely simple relation of of the aesthetic to political to ideals of social justice, andtotothe theanti-inertial anti-inertial and the aesthetic to political work,work, to ideals of social justice, and and oppositional. In his prolific last years, Jarman’s work in every medium, including that of the garden, addressed his prolific last years, Jarman’s work in every medium, including that of the garden, addressed environmental degradation, and the abandonments and persecutions of gays and the poor.

AIDSone and other andthese
Chance and contingency are invited into
Jeremy Isaacs
Derek of Dungeness of theofOrder of Celluloid
The garden
Paul In
Revolution are conveniently
He expunged
His traditional art training at
Jarman hints at such an encoding in his film
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call