Since 1974, German filmmaker Ulrike Ottinger has
created a substantial body of films that explore a world of difference
defined by the tension and transfer between settled and nomadic ways of
life. In many of her films, including Exile Shanghai," an experimental
documentary about the Jews of Shanghai, and Joan of Arc of Mongolia,
"in which passengers on the Trans-Siberian Express are abducted by
Mongolian bandits, she also probes the encounter with the other,
whether exotic or simply unpredictable. In Ulrike Ottinger" Laurence A.
Rickels offers a series of sensitive and original analyses of
Ottinger's films, as well as her more recent photographic artworks,
situated within a dazzling thought experiment centered on the history
of art cinema through the turn of the twenty-first century. In addition
to commemorating the death of a once-vital art form, this book also
affirms Ottinger's defiantly optimistic turn toward the documentary
film as a means of mediating present clashes between tradition and
modernity, between the local and the global. Widely regarded as a
singular and provocative talent, Ottinger's conspicuous absence from
critical discourse is, for Rickels, symptomatic of the art cinema's
demise. Incorporating interviews he conducted with Ottinger and
illustrated with stunning examples from her photographic oeuvre, this
book takes up the challenges posed by Ottinger's filmography to
interrogate, ultimately, the very practice-and possibility-of art
cinema today. Laurence A. Rickels is professor of German and
comparative literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara,
and the author of several books, including The Case of California, The
Vampire Lectures," and thethree-volume Nazi Psychoanalysis" (all
published by Minnesota). He is a recognized art writer whose
reflections on contemporary visual art appear regularly in numerous
exhibition catalogues as well as in Artforum, artUS, "and Flash Art..