Mind Altering Cinematography
The Journal of Continental Philosophy January 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.5840/jcp202533157 via OpenAlex
Summary
The work of Stanislav Grof on LSD therapy, which spans over fifty years, provides insights into non-ordinary states of consciousness that can be connected to cinema. This article suggests a psychedelic re-orientation of the cinematographic unconscious, arguing that media culture is deeply intertwined with the unconscious and raises important questions about human existence in a changing world. It highlights the transformative potential of these experiences in understanding our media landscape.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | The article proposes that media culture is part of the unconscious, prompting profound inquiries about human existence amidst crisis. |
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Abstract
In this time of the so-called psychedelic renaissance, it is “mind-revealing” to rediscover the body of work on LSD therapy by Stanislav Grof. As researcher of the transformative potential of non-ordinary states of consciousness, his observations from over fifty years of LSD research offer a holistic and deeply philosophical approach towards the realms of the human unconscious. Reading his work, one cannot help but make connections to (certain genres in) cinema. While in the mid-twentieth century film theory developed from and in relation to psychoanalytic conceptions of the unconscious, this article proposes to look at the lessons from research in psychedelics, to propose a psychedelic re-orientation of the cinematographic unconsciousness. Rather than a conscious or unconscious and ideological representation of the world, this article argues that our media culture itself belongs to the vast realm of the unconscious where we have strange encounters that lead to profound questions about what it means to be human in a transforming world in crisis.