Audacious and genre-defying,
Black and Blue is steeped in melancholy, in the feeling of being blue, or, rather, black and blue, with all the literality of bruised flesh. Roland Barthes
and Marcel Proust are inspirations for and subjects of Carol Mavor's exquisite, image-filled rumination on efforts to capture fleeting moments and to comprehend the incomprehensible. At the
book's heart are one book and three films��oland Barthes's
Camera Lucida, Chris Marker's
La Jet矇e and
Sans soleil, and Marguerite Duras's and Alain Resnais's
Hiroshima
mon amour��ostwar French works that register disturbing truths about loss and regret, and violence and history, through aesthetic refinement.
Personal recollections punctuate Mavor's dazzling interpretations of these and many other works of art and criticism. Childhood memories become Proust's "small-scale contrivances," tiny
sensations that open onto panoramas. Mavor's mother lost her memory to Alzheimer's, and Black and Blue is framed by the author's memories of her mother and effort to understand what
it means to not be recognized by one to whom you were once so known.