Saturday 24 August 2024

PART VI. CHANGELINGS, TROGS (GOLEMS), MOTHERHOOD AND THE MASSACRES OF WHITE CHRISTIANS, IN THE FILMS: 'THE HOLE IN THE GROUND, PREMIERED AT THE SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL 25 JANUARY 2019, 90 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEE CRONIN', 'THE PIT, 23 OCTOBER 1981, 101 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEW LEHMAN' AND 'JUG FACE, 23 JANUARY 2013, PREMIERED AT THE SLAMDANCE FILM FESTIVAL, 81 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY CHAD CRAWFORD KINKLE', A BLOG, 23 AUGUST 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY.

§1.0 - Points 1.0–1.13: THIS BLOG'S CONTENTS: 
1.1 - THIS BLOG'S TITLE:
1.2 - PART VI. CHANGELINGS, TROGS (GOLEMS), MOTHERHOOD AND THE MASSACRES OF WHITE CHRISTIANS IN THE FILMS: 'THE HOLE IN THE GROUND, PREMIERED AT THE SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL 25 JANUARY 2019, 90 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEE CRONIN', 'THE PIT, 23 OCTOBER 1981, 101 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEW LEHMAN' AND 'JUG FACE, 23 JANUARY 2013, PREMIERED AT THE SLAMDANCE FILM FESTIVAL, 81 MINUTES', DIRECTED BY CHAD CRAWFORD KINKLE'—A BLOG, 25 AUGUST 2024, BY CRAIG STEVEN JOSEPH LACEY /
1.3 - THIS BLOG'S LISTED SECTIONS AND NUMBERED POINTS:
1.4 - §2.0: Points 2.0–2.12: DISCLAIMER /
1.5 - §3.0: Points 3.0–3.2: DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND PUBLICATION /
1.6 - §4.0: Points 4.0–4.22: "YOU ARE NOT MY SON." /
1.7 - §5.0: Points 5.0–5.15: BUT A SINGLE MOTHER CAN LIVE WITH HER CHILD /
1.8 - §6.0: Points 6.0–6.13: ONLY ONE CONNECTION TO THE TRUTH AND AN INCREDIBLE ONE AT THAT /
1.9 - §7.0: Points 7.0 –7.16: SURVEILLING THE CHANGELING'S CHANGES /
1.10 - §8.0: Points 8.0–8.15: REGARDING PATHETIC FALLACY AND FIGURES OF THE UNDER-WORLD IN THE FILM /
1.11 - §9.0: Points 9.0–9.25: COMPARISONS MADE TO THE FILM: 'THE PIT, 23 OCTOBER 1981, 101 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEW LEHMAN' AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE TROG'S SYMBOLISM /
1.12 - §10.0: Points 10.0–10.25: A FURTHER COMPARISON TO THE FILM: 'JUG FACE, 23 JANUARY 2013, PREMIERED AT THE SLAMDANCE FILM FESTIVAL, 81 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY CHAD CRAWFORD KINKLE' /
1.13 - §11.0: Points 11.0 –11.18: SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN / 
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§2.0 - THE DISCLAIMER—Refer to Points 2.0–2.11, directly beneath.
2.1 - All rights reserved © Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, 4 December 1976–, Australia. 2.2 - Changing the content or re-publishing this blog is strictly prohibited. 2.3 - This blog is protected by the: 2.4 - Privacy Act 1988 of Australia, against unauthorized access to Craig Steven Joseph Lacey's Samsung Galaxy A05s, and Google account; 2.5 - Cybercrime Act 2001 of Australia, against computer fraud or internet fraud; 2.6 - Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, against intellectual property theft; 2.7 - Universal Copyright Convention, circa 1952; 2.8 - Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, 9 September 1886. 2.9 - Fines and/or prosecution will apply according to Australian and International law in reference to unauthorised access and use of this blog published through the Blogger app of Google.com and the author's storage device(s) with the data. 2.10 - A total of four images have been used within this blog. 2.11 - At directly beneath points: 4.10; 5.17; 7.3; 8.2 and 10.5, the last being a single image of a composite of three film-stills from: Jug Head, 23 January 2013, 81 minutes, directed by Chad Crawford Kinkle.
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§3.0 - DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND PUBLICATION—Refer directly beneath to the points 3.0–3.3.
3.1 - This blog was started at 19.08.2024 and completed 25.08.2024, as researched and composed only by Craig Steven Joseph Lacey at Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia, 4000. 3.2 - Word count: 6,802 and characters count: 40,002. 3.3 - Last up-dated: 23:58, Australian Eastern Standard Time, 25.08.2024.
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§4.0 - "YOU ARE NOT MY SON."—Refer directly beneath to the points 4.0–4.22.
4.1 - In the Irish film: 4.2 - The Hole In The Ground, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 25 January 2019, 90 minutes, directed by Lee Cronin, through the production companies: Savage Productions; Wrong Men; Made; Irish Film Board; Bankside Films; Wallimage; VOO; Be TV; BNP Paribas; Fortis Film Finance; Head Gear Films; Metrol Technology; Broadcasting; Authority of Ireland; Finnish Film Foundation4.3 - a single mother's relation to her young male child is scrutinized as a relation that proves to be the inversion of the film already extensively critiqued through my blogger site: 4.4 - You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, premiered at Toronto International Film Festival, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan, through the production company: Fantastic Films. 4.5 - Quite literally, regarding this film the mother, Sarah O'Neill, acted by Seána Kerslake, exclaims to Chris O'Neill, acted by James Quinn Markey: "you are not my son." 4.6 - As the film unfolds the changeling son, "Chris", begins to exhibit behaviours dissimilar to a child per se, despite his exact resemblance to Sarah's real ten year old son. 4.7 - How can the audience believe the film's continual "revelations" as anything but the portrayal of her "delusion"? 4.8 - The suspension of disbelief is on Sarah's side as the film's protagonist whose perspective is the focal point of the narration, and while meagre information is revealed regarding her character's personal history, Sarah is portrayed as a mother compelled to protect the safety and interests of her boy, to commend her as being a moral enough person. 4.9 - As a mother whose suspicions of an impostor son must be believed by the audience through a sympathetic identification, the so-called scrutiny must reveal an unbiased methodology of parental-based detection, or else the mother is deemed an uncaring woman who has turned against the naturalness of motherhood to dæmonize her own child. 4.10 - Sympathy is possibly most evinced from the audience in reference to the frustration of Sarah's circumstances: for even if she finds evidence to prove her intuitions correct, against such a thing as an impostor son, who can really help? 4.11 -  The sense of isolation of the home and occurrences are as a "vignette event", where it could be the case none of it happened anyway. 4.12 - Isolation is a subject that has received an earlier filmic treatment set within contemporary Ireland: 4.13 - Isolation, 11 September 2005, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 95 minutes, directed by Billy O'Brien, through the production companies: Film Four, Lions Gate Films and The Irish Film Board. 4.14 - Experimentation of a genetic type of grotesque inhumanity, on an isolated farm in which hybridized cows and humans are bred—possibly as a variation to the minotaur myth—is of the science-fiction, horror genre category, separate to this film directed by Lee Cronin that meets the possibly over-general criteria for the genre of the 'super-natural / psychological thriller'. 4.15 - The psychology that emerges from the mother–son family unit regards its existence without a father as still supposedly a scenario that is of the "shock of the new", particularly in reference to this film that involves a film script without a direct mention of the father, to suggests both the mother and son wish to move on and forget him. 4.16 - That dissociation is proven reasonable enough when Sarah's treating physician pulls back her fringe to reveal a large scar across her forehead, indicated as caused by the now absent husband. 4.17 - To a greater extent the question that is posed by the film is: how can the son ever really be known, when the father is omitted and, it would appear, to be forgotten? 4.18 - The boy's identity remains under question by lighting and visual techniques, as the diffused light found throughout the film as captured by Tom Comerford's cinematography is contrasted to dark silhouettes or partially visible forms of spaces, such as the home's interior or the forest, and an almost monochromatic lens that reveals a white light reminiscent of the moon's luminosity, visible also during day-time scenes. 4.19 - Refer to the film-still directly beneath in which Chris's figure is cast in to shadow such as to present the enigma of his transformed self, against the light streaming in through the window's curtains.
4.20 - That question, at point 4.17, of course, is asked in the absence of the husband, who may have disappeared in a "puff of cloud", as that great, awful dæmon, Mephistopheles, always seems to do when he is about to receive his come-uppance, viz. for such matters as organizing the scenarios presented by this film. 4.21 - Psychologically, the absented father of the film's narrative symbolizes the sins of the father, and such as the case with the film: You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, 93 minutes, the father's almost complete absence is indicative of an over-compensation regarding his apparent non-involvement in the matters that unfold in such films. 4.22 - To seemingly exonerate himself of any accusation, the mother, Sarah, must be demonstrated as being tested by the truth of, here in this film, her maternal love, by way of an almost impossible ordeal—though this is averred argumentum ex silentio, once again, because the inferred subject is absent from the narrative.
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§5.0 - BUT A SINGLE MOTHER CAN LIVE WITH HER CHILD—Refer directly beneath to the points 5.0–5.15.
5.1 - The film represents a scrutinous eye—the absent father's eye—deliberately conflated with Sarah's over-active doubt that deteriorates to the more serious, paranoia: a matter of which could have verification by the fact she is recently prescribed a brand of selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, probably the pervasive diazepam ("valium") for "anxiety troubles"—though attitudes towards the use of such medication among audiences can still maintain, such medication use declares a sort of defectiveness and unreliability, thereafter discrediting the treated person. 5.2 - Sarah takes the medication in a gesture that covers over her mouth with her hand, such as to symbolically express its silencing of herself—and it is a subject examined regarding, again to mention: You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan, in which the much more affecting lithium is administered to the mother to settle her down, instead transforms her—and in reference to my earlier blogs on the Three Mothers Trilogy, compare that other secret, mind-altering drug: laudanum. 5.3 - This film of circa 2019 is less chaotic in its narration as a small but intimate world is brought in to focus through enclosed, dimly lit scenes of Sarah and Chris in the home, such that the scenes set in Sarah's vehicle, the next-door forest, Chris's elementary school, the neighbour's home, all are of an outside world that when it emerges as a focal point to the narrative, is brief and almost unreal. 5.4 - Refer to the film-still directly beneath of the mother, Sarah, and son, Chris, sitting at the kitchen table with a stove in the back-ground, that appears to be luminous, as though a light is switched on in the stove's smoke canopy when in fact the twilight has entered from a window and glimmers in the stove's metal finish—possibly a metaphor for maternal angst.
5.5 - The character of Sarah is continually challenged by the presentation of questionable facts. 5.6 - At one time, late at night, when Chris appears to have gone missing, Sarah takes a torch in to the dark woods—almost seeing an apparition of something near a tree—to return to the house to phone police and, while doing as such, Chris appears to claim he was at the house all the time. 5.7 - The test (or experiment) is psychologically grueling and ultimately taxing: when Sarah really should be about establishing her new home with her son, she is beset by such other-worldly hindrances, which prevent her realising her dream of a new life. 5.8 - The nation of Ireland involves a terrible history, following circa 1169, when the Anglo-Normans took great swathes of Irish land supposedly as decreed by the papal bull: Laudabiliter, circa 1155, of the English-born Pope Adrian IV.; a time when the Catholic Church applied tests as "trials by ordeal", such as in reference to charges made against women for being witches—considered proved if she stayed afloat in water, rather than drowned. 5.9 - Refer to the excerpt of "the ordeal by water", directly beneath: 5.10 - 'Much to the delight of the assembled by-standers, both Mary and her mother floated to the surface during this initial phase of the trial. Consequently, they were removed from the water, examined for witches' marks and then subjected to a second swimming. This time, however, they were bound in the more traditional manner, the left thumb tied to the right toe and the right thumb to the left toe, with a rope about their middle extended to the shore. Once more both of the women floated to the surface, confirming their guilt. They were subsequently imprisoned, brought to trial before the assize of Bedford, formally convicted of witchcraft, and executed'—from: page 221, "The Ordeal By Water (Swimming of Witches) In The East Slavic World" by Russell Zguta, in: Slavic Review, circa 1977, Volume 36.2, pages 220–230. 5.11 - To take a leap back to the future, that is, during more recent times, the "Saw franchise" of supernatural thriller / horror genre films of the 2000s, created by the Australian film-makers James Wan and Leigh Whannell, involve narratives predicated upon torturing people in order they prove their mettle, that is, by an absent master-mind—inferred to be a modern re-versioning of the grand inquisitor, as of the Christian-related, historical Inquisitions. 5.12 - For an example of one of the franchise films refer to: 5.13 - Saw, 19 January 2004, premiered at Sundance Film Festival, 103 minutes, directed by James Wan, production company: Twisted Pictures. 5.14 - The father, "Mephistopheles", then orchestrates the harrowing of hell for his "recalcitrant" past wife, with the expectation she will return to him for help. 5.15 - Regarding this film, Sarah and Chris move to a new home during the film's ending, to a set of modern-styled flats, nearer to a community, and it is indicated not to the husband / father.
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§6.0 - ONLY ONE CONNECTION TO THE TRUTH, AND AN INCREDIBLE ONE AT THAT—Refer directly beneath to the points 6.0–6.13.
6.1 - The truth is delivered to Sarah via very peculiar means: Noreen Brady, acted by Kati Outinen, an elderly woman and neighbour who takes the role of truly hysterical femininity. 6.2 - Noreen is discovered on the road between Sarah's and the Brady's homes when Noreen stands in the middle of it almost as though she is disorientated, and further, when Sarah attempts to converse with her, Noreen is heard to mutter inaudible words beneath her dark hood. 6.3 - At a later scene of Sarah at a dinner party with her adult friends, the disclosure of the history of Noreen's tragic past is made: Noreen is beset by grief over the death of her ten year old son, James—and she emerges as that staple figure of Victorian loss, a variation of Miss Havisham—befitting the gothic æsthetics of the film. 6.4 - Yet later a similar scene unfolds when Noreen causes Sarah to stop her vehicle: Sarah asks Noreen to step out of her way, to which Noreen offers no reply, but instead starts yelling the accusation: "he is not your son," against Chris who is moved to the inside of the vehicle. 6.5 - The melodrama transforms in to the ominous, when Noreen is shown to stare in at Chris through the passenger window, that within a few seconds she head-buts to leave a smear of blood on the glass. 6.6 - Here is the figure of the crone whose role is revealed to point out the hidden truth such as during a journey filled with ordeals to overcome, as narrated by classical myths and folk-lore tales, or the crone is shown to point the bone as a curse of judgment. 6.7 - For Sarah, the figure of Noreen represents the possibility of herself down the road at some later point, then truly mad, and further, as a point of telling the future, it also involves Chris's early death: it being the cause of his mother's later madness. 6.8 - Despite the madness, Noreen's accusation of an impostor for Sarah's son is proven correct, such that who is presumed insane and defunct, is revealed as who can provide the greatest clarity of truth. 6.9 - Through Noreen, Sarah's own doubts of acquiring mental infirmity may be registered as no greater than the illusions of hysteria that cloud the truth. 6.10 - The path to greater wisdom is beset by the unexpected: the film reiterates that nothing is to be presumed or taken prima facie, rather that surface appearances must be penetrated by the intellect towards an understanding, instead of overly brief, often dismissive prejudgments. 6.11 - But for Sarah the connection to the truth is short-lived, as Sarah, upon later deciding to attempt to query Noreen on what it is she meant by her accusation of Chris being an impostor, ventures to Norren's home and discovers Noreen's body, shown with her head buried in the soil, which would have prevented her breathing, while the remainder of her body is laid on the lawn. 6.12 - The police would never believe the fantastical elements of Sarah's testimony, such as the notion of a boy having killed Noreen for her accusing him of being an impostor. 6.13 - At that point in the film, Sarah presents with an hallucination she is shown to have, but that she keeps secret from police—when Chris is seen by Sarah with another police officer in the back-ground of Sarah's police interview, whose wrist Chris snaps off in a game of arm wrestle.
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§7.0 - SURVEILLING THE CHANGELING'S CHANGE—Refer directly beneath to the points 7.0–7.21.
7.1 - Chris demonstrates super-human strength during an out-burst after Sarah makes queries as to Chris's where-abouts, in reference to Chris's G.I. Joe figurine, the vintage "Duke", the First Sergeant of circa 1984, she found during a jog, beside the hole. 7.2 - Sarah herself takes to a new level of scrutiny by surveillance, in which she places a camera in the wall of Chris's bedroom, later to use the footage as evidence that Chris is no longer himself, or is an impostor—though the footage is not shown to the audience, it is gauged by the neighbour, Des Brady's reaction to slam the camera to the ground with an out-burst for Sarah to stop her suspicion. 7.3 - Refer to the film-still directly beneath that shows a type of spy hole in a brick wall through which Sarah is seen to stare almost at the audience, to display a visual pun on the subject of who is watching who?
7.4 - Chris has taken to eating spiders; a reversal of one of Chris's standard traits: he had until that time arachnophobia in which he could not tolerate spiders anywhere near him. 7.5 - At Chris's school he participates in a musical, singing a macabre song about a bog, such as the line—"oh, the rattling bog down in the valley", and the combined effect of the song's subject with Chris's piercing, smoldering performance, finally unhinges Sarah to cause for her to declare to her friend, Louise, acted by Simone Kirby, a parent at the performance too, that Chris is not her son. 7.6 - Chris then appears with his teacher, acted by David Crowley, as to enquire of Sarah's opinion of his performance and faced with the group before her: Chris, her local friend and Chris's school teacher, Sarah runs frantically down one of the school's corridors as though she has further acknowledged the real possibility that the town's people all know of the hole in the ground at the forest, but keep eerily stüm. 7.7 - The surveillance stops at this point. 7.8 - Chris soon afterwards beats—with his inexplicable super-human strength—Sarah unconscious and drags her to the home's lawn, where it is inferred he re-stages Noreen's murder, by burying Sarah's head face down in a hole, later compacted with dirt to cause suffocation. 7.9 - There is no doubt he is something of a döppleganger, but when Sarah struggles free and drags an unconscious Chris to the house's basement, Chris re-awakens and reveals himself to be a creature with almost a black dog's head, that ambiguously could be the head of a baboon or macaque per cynocephali, because the film's special effects are impressionistic and almost hallucinatory to deny the possibility of any sure verification. 7.10 - That is, the changeling (and döppleganger) mythos remain shrouded in mystery. 7.11 - The "black dog" allusion is to Anubis, the Ancient Egyptian funerary god who is the male counter-part to Isis, a religious figure that has emerged in the discourse of my earlier blogs regarding the witch: Part III. Further Still On Dario Argento's The Three Mothers' Trilogy—the Film: 'Mother Of Tears: The Third Mother, 6 September 2007, 141:38 Minutes', Directed By Dario Argento; A Blog, 30 July 2024, By Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, at URL: <https://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com/2024/07/part-iii-further-still-on-dario.html>. 7.12 - Anubis's connection to the later revealed creatures under the hole's bottom outer layer, is to that other hole in the ground, the grave, and the earth's containment of the under-world, which is a symbolism shared among the Abrahamic religions of: 7.14 - Christianity: Hell; 7.15 - Islam: Jahannam; 7.16 - Judaism: Sheol. 7.17 - The bottom of the hole, if anything, alludes to the Old Testament: 'Sheol', used to refer to a grave pit, an interpretation reinforced by the noun sheol's association to: 'bōr / בור‎', viz. a pit, that is found referenced in the Tanakh / Old Testament regarding the Israelites' captivity—for examples: 7.18 - Isaiah 14:15, English Standard Version: 'you will be brought down to Sheol, / to the lowest depths of the Pit'. 7.19 - Isaiah 24:22, English Standard Version: 'They will be gathered together / like prisoners in a pit. / They will be confined to a dungeon / and punished after many days'. 7.20 - Ezekiel's words of "the people of the old who dwell in the world below" and "who are uninhabited"—such as to refer to an emptiness of soul or character—is prophesied as the fate of the Tyrians, (a people of Phoenician ethnicity), after the Assyrian monarch will take them captive: 7.21 - 'I will make you go down with those who go down to the pit, to the people of old, and I will make you to dwell in the world below, among ruins from of old, with those who go down to the pit, so that you will not be inhabited; but I will set beauty in the land of the living'—from: Ezekiel 26:20, English Standard Version.
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§8.0 - REGARDING PATHETIC FALLACY AND FIGURES OF THE UNDER-WORLD IN THE FILM—Refer directly beneath to the points 8.0–8.15.
8.1 - During the scrutiny of the isolated mother–son relation, the landscape emerges itself as something of a third actor, in a filmic use of pathetic fallacy, a trademark trope of the super-realist style of super-natural thriller / giallo genre films. 8.2 - Refer to the film-still directly beneath, of the sink-hole in the forest—shown in one of the many ærial shots which contribute to the film's atmosphere of observation and scrutiny as from above.
8.3 - The forest, traditionally known per Western European folk-lore as "the woods", at the outer edges of the family home's back-yard, is a gloomy, silent place, devoid of bird or other wild-life, it is itself a threshold that marks the outer limits of knowledge: a liminal zone, where crossing-overs may take place. 8.4 - The pine forests of Wicklow shown in the film represent the inversion of the pastoral idyll, of the romantic or enchanted forest, which is the 'locus amœnus', inverted as the 'locus terribilis' comparable to that Stygian grove, ever shaded and chilly, as though frozen in time, representative of the outer gate of an inner circle that is symbolized by the hole in the ground, a portal to a different world inside another portal, the hole that is an entry point to the under-world. 8.5 - The film's allusions to Græco-Roman Classicism are faint, yet there are remnants, such as Sarah's descent in to the earth at the base of the hole: she sinks in to the ground as though re-born under-ground where cavernous rooms lead to a dungeon, where Irish children, abducted from the nearby town, are seen as skeletal remains, imprisoned until starved to death. 8.6 - As Sarah finds and unshackles the authentic Chris, who is still alive, Sarah awakens the creatures of the under-world, shown as figures emerging from the earth. 8.7 - This is the recurrence of the myth of Orpheus who goes to hell for his beloved, such as narrated by "Book 10, Orpheus Et Eurydice", in: Metamorphoses, by Naso P. Ovidius, translation by Arthur Golding, Brookes More, editor, in reference to Hades / Hell as amoena terribilis:
8.8 - '[the poet] dared descend by the Tænarian gate down to the gloomy Styx.
And there passed through pale-glimmering phantoms, and the ghosts escaped from sepulchres, until he found Persephone and Pluto, 
master-king of shadow-realms below:
and then began to strike his tuneful lyre, to which he sang —
“O deities of this dark world beneath
the earth! this shadowy underworld,
to which all mortals must descend!
If it can be called lawful, and if you will suffer speech of strict truth (all the winding ways of Falsity forbidden) 
I come not down here because of curiosity to see the glooms of Tartarus and have no thought to bind or strangle the three necks of the Medusan Monster, vile with snakes [the Cerberus]
But I have come, because my darling wife stepped on a viper that sent through her veins death-poison"'—from The Persus Digital Library, Tufts University, Ovid's Metamorphoses, Arthur Golding circa 1567, accessed, 21 August 2024, <https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text>.
8.9 - True to the super-realist style the special effects are constrained: really only used in very minimalistic terms, such as in reference to a spider here or there, shown by computer animation to crawl along the ground or floor, later to be swallowed by Chris, and the almost deformed back of Chris that is revealed to Sarah as she stares in to Chris room through a key hole. 8.10 - Rather than Sarah stand outside looking in, at the base of the hole she is inside the navel of connection between the world of the dead and living, though on this latter point of the living, the rural regions filmed outside of Dublin are portrayed as exilic states of purgatorial gloom. 8.11 - Here, at this point, the changeling mythos, as discussed in my earlier blogs, is taken to the other side of the folk-lore legend, viz. of the darker creatures, such as of the trolls and goblins of the woods, regarding which point, this film presents a quite different category of creature. 8.12 - The creatures are suggested to be golems, made of the dust and soil that surrounds them in their pit. 8.13 - Within the pit, a dungeon is revealed that has held children from the town in shackles, given the fact their skeletal remains lay still shackled, but more to the point, Sarah discovers her real son, Chris, and unchains him, to awaken the creatures as if from the earth itself. 8.14 - As Sarah drags Chris through a tunnel, one of the creatures grabs hold of Sarah's arm, at which point, it becomes Sarah, such as to suggest that the golem can emerge from their cavernous existences as changelings; as döpplegangers—they have no identity of their own, but must imitate some-one else. 8.15 - At that moment, the presumption that only children are substituted through the lore of that changeling mythos is destabilized, such that within this cinematic vision of contemporary Ireland, no-one is free from the question of authenticity.
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§9.0 - COMPARISONS MADE TO THE FILM: 'THE PIT, 23 OCTOBER 1981, 101 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY LEW LEHMAN' AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE TROG'S SYMBOLISM—Refer directly beneath to the points 9.0–9.25.
9.1 - There are a number of similarities between the film mostly discussed within this blog: 9.2 - The Hole In The Ground, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 25 January 2019, 90 minutes, directed by Lee Cronin, and: 9.3 - The Pit, 23 October 1981, 101 minutes, directed by Lew Lehman, production company Amulet Pictures. 9.4 - Arguably, the crucial points of similarity refer to the central aspects of the narratives to involve a: 9.5 - boy featuring challenging behaviours; 9.6 - a suspicious mother figure; 9.7 - the woods / forest; 9.8 - A hole in the ground; 9.9 - creatures / spirits living in a hole. 9.10 - The mystery of sexuality as an aspect of identity blooming during adolescence, the time of coming-of-age, is openly examined in the film of circa 1981, though repressed regarding the more recent film, that focuses on the prepubescent Chris. 9.11 - The approach that embraces folk-loric meta-narrative as analogous to legend as pseudo-history, such that I have implemented arguably over-rides "the psychological" approach that tends to forward an asocial argument, as though people are separate to society, politics and history. 9.12 - The boy, Jamie, is presented as developmentally delayed, yet his intrigue with the opposite sex is usual at the pubescent age—though he conducts a number of regressed behaviours, such as the use of a teddy to talk to, that may as much indicate isolation and loneliness, but his discussion of "Trogs", living in a hole in the woods, would be deemed delusional when it may have a correlation to something outside psychology's various theories. 9.13 - The name "Trogs" that Jamie uses to refer to the creatures with yellow eyes living in the hole, bears similarity to Frogs: pets Jamie keeps in a terrarium at his house, but 'trog' could be interpreted as an abbreviation for 'troglodyte', that is, a human cave dweller, which in this context takes a pit to refer to a cave. 9.14 - The "Trogs" are further found as the permutations of: 9.15 - "The Invisible People" who abduct a white child, are one of Brazil's indigenous tribes in: 9.16 - The Emerald Forest, 3 July 1985, the United States Of America, 114 minutes, directed by John Boorman. 9.17 - "The Troglodistes", a group of mole-men who live in the sewers of Paris in: 9.18 - Delicatessen, 17 April 1991, France, 99 minutes, directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro. 9.19 - "The Morlocks", a fictional species of humanoid ape that dwell beneath the earth, that construct machines and cannibalize humans from the earth's surface, as from the texts: 9.20 - The Time Machine, 8 March 2002, 96 minutes, directed by Simon Wells, based on: 9.21 - The Time Machine, 17 August 1960, 103 minutes, directed by George Pal, that is based on: 9.22 - The Time Machine, circa 1895, by H.G. Wells; re-published, circa 2005, London: Penguin Books Ltd, 128 pages, ISBN-10: 0141439971 and ISBN-13: 9780141439976. 9.23 - "A cannibalistic clan of Native American Indians" in the film: 9.24 - Bone Tomahawk, premiered 1 October 2015, at Fantastic Fest, 132 minutes, directed by S. Craig Zahler. 9.25 - The "Trogs" of any one of the above listed texts could be fictional recreations of historically recorded peoples known to have lived in caves or pits, and certainly in forests, as of tribal or "illegal immigrant" peoples.
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§10.0 - A FURTHER COMPARISON TO THE FILM: 'JUG FACE, 23 JANUARY 2013, PREMIERED AT THE SLAMDANCE FILM FESTIVAL, 81 MINUTES, DIRECTED BY CHAD CRAWFORD KINKLE'—Refer directly beneath to the points 10.0–10.25.
10.1 - The opening sequence of this film: 10.2 - Jug Face, 23 January 2013, Premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival, 81 minutes, directed by Chad Crawford Kinkle—referred to in this discussion as "Film X"; 10.3 - uses naïvely wrought illustrations, suggested as drawn by children, but their subject is not a child's subject, viz. the massacre of white Christians from a church and commune nearby, and it would appear to have been done at the very same hole in the ground in the woods as portrayed in the film: 10.4 - The Hole In The Ground, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 25 January 2019, 90 minutes, directed by Lee Cronin—referred to in this discussion as "Film Y". 10.5 - Regarding this discussion of the opening sequence of "Film X", refer to three film-stills within a single composite, directly beneath, that depicts crude, child-type illustrations of a massacre of Christians.
10.6 - The first film-still depicts a church near a forest, similar to Sarah's and Chris's house near a forest. 10.7 - The third film-still depicts a hole in the ground that is almost the exact, same sink-hole depicted in "Film Y". 10.8 - We might leave the two films' shared depictions of the amoena terribilis as something of the uncanny, but I have briefly written of my experiences of being labeled and persecuted as a changeling, and know that it was factual rather than something of the inexplicably uncanny. 10.9 - The "Film Y" does not offer an exposition that provides for an explanation of the opening sequence's scenes of a massacre, viz. the cutting of the Christian people's throats over the hole, but an explanation can be deduced. 10.10 - Christians who formerly lived at the site were massacred, perhaps along the lines of the "artificial apocalypse" I have discussed in my earlier blogs? 10.11 - The "Film Y" is not set in Ireland, but Nashville, Tennessee, the United States Of America, where many Irish Christians immigrated—refer to: Scots-irish In The Hills Of Tennessee, 1 August 1995, by Billy Kennedy, Ambassador Publications, English Language‎, 224 pages, ISBN-10‎: 1898787468, ISBN-13‎: 978-1898787464. 10.12 - The isolated house of "Film Y" may be the last one standing of a village with a church, and the villagers were subject to a massacre as depicted in "Film X". 10.13 - Both films indicate not only the usurpation of white Irish people, involving the demolition of buildings, but the installation of Occult-based forms of cults within such areas formerly of Irish Catholic heritage. 10.14 - This last point of 10.12 is suggested because the cult portrayed in the "Film X" involves worship of a dark idol thought to live in the hole in the ground. 10.15 - The cult's lore involves a pottery maker, who, as a commune prophet, after making a jug with the likeness of one of the cult members, is believed to condemn that member to death as a human sacrifice to the hole's dark spirit, and the film portrays the protagonist's execution as her throat is cut and blood poured in to the hole. 10.16 - The hole in the ground depicted in "Film X" is not the same as the one depicted in its opening sequence illustrations: the hole of "Film X" is unimpressively small with muddy water at its base. 10.17 - The small hole is aligned to the film's cinéma vérité style, in which is narrated a crudely simple set of beliefs that causes for the suspension of disbelief required to believe, that such cults as the one portrayed exist and involve ritual human sacrifice based on omens made by a local potter. 10.18 - The gaping sink-hole and the massacre of white Christians of the crude illustrations is distorted by modality, and possibly met with instant incredulity: children's versions of events are extended little credibility. 10.19 - Though most Western World audiences know of art therapists who analyse children's drawings to discern the truth of children's experience portrayed in their art, because small children often inadvertently tell the truth through expression, particularly of any deeply traumatic experience—or, as the old adage states: "from the mouth of babes". 10.20 - Thus, some element of credulity can be lent to the opening sequence illustrations after all. 10.21 - Comparably, for all the slickness of style of "Film Y", it merely transports the audience to another world of the super-natural thriller genre, after which the audience resumes daily life. 10.22 - While the dark idols at the base of the hole in the ground might be fanciful to some people, to others it is an essential part of a religious / cult-based perspective. 10.23 - I do not believe in changelings, but other people do and their beliefs have harmed myself throughout my life, such that the discussed films ought to be considered from an anthropological approach that I hope I have applied. 10.24 - The ancient and so-called modern cultures are, according to my experience, side-by-side, where secular modernity has filled a space that denies such notions I have discussed here, and the cult-based, ancient ways of life leaves no room for outsiders' perspectives. 10.25 - The cult is indicated to be based on psychological programming, so-called because it involves falsity, that is, the children, small children and adults children must lie for the sake of the father.
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§11.0 - SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN—Refer directly beneath to the points 11.0–11.19.
11.1 - Sickenly, here in Australia disappearances continue to occur of children as though it is a tradition—it would be uncustomary to phone police as to the where-abouts of the well-known abductors—yet, might not some serious consideration be made in reference to the insights proffered by my blogs for the children's sake? 11.2 - According to Matthew 19:14, Jesus Christ began the Passion, at Perea, near Jericho, where to many of the followers on the trail, Jesus gave a sermon to one and all, but when approached by small children, Jesus Christ's disciples turned them away. 11.3 - By Saint Matthew's word, the Messiah is written to have said: 11.4 - “Suffer the little children, and forbid them not to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven"—from Matthew 19:14, English Standard Version. 11.5 - The verb: 'suffer' is addressed to Jesus Christ's disciples as an instruction that, rather than turn the small children away from Jesus Christ, allow the small children to be included in Jesus Christ's sermons and, by extension, within society. 11.6 - 'Sufferance' is a synonym to: 'endurance', such as to confer the significance that the disciples and other adults might endure, it is inferred, small children's ignorance or unsettled conduct. 11.7 - Christianity commends that children have child-hoods and their "greenness" is to be suffered, to be endured, rather than punished through exclusion—for how else will the children learn? 11.8 - The matter of suffering small children may be taken too far, as indicated by such fictional texts as: 11.9 - The short prose piece titled: "Suffer The Little Children" by Stephen King, first published in the circa February 1972 volume of the magazine: Cavalier; re-published later in: 11.10 - Nightmares & Dreamscapes, 29 September 1993, Viking, 816 pages, ISBN: 978-0-670-85108-9. 11.11 - The narrative of the short prose piece involves the character, a third grade teacher, Miss Emily Sidley, who is advised by the quietest student of her class, Robert, that the other students, who are unnerving her, are changelings—or döpplegangers. 11.12 - Gradually, Miss Emily Sidley is unhinged by the peculiar sense of observation she feels under, though the boy, Robert, is the one who, in telling her the apparent truth, most vexes her. 11.13 - Eventually, fragile Miss Emily Sidley is led to shoot twelve of the children she has suspected to be changelings, that is, in a sound-proof room. 11.14 - While under religious or superstitious prejudices, children may be dæmonized, human killing or sacrifice is a transgression of the Christian God's law, and it ought to be remembered, Christianity exalts the truth rather than pander to the father's lies. 11.15 - People such as the character Miss Emily Sidley are condemned to eternal damnation for murder, as Jesus Christ says to the rich man who seeks eternal life: 11.16 - 'And Jesus said, “You shall not murder, you shall not commit adultery, you shall not steal, you shall not bear false witness [lying]'—from Matthew 19:18, English Standard Version. 11.17 - The wisdom of Jesus Christ and the New Testament may save souls, and is only availed through baptism and re-birth as a Christian who follows the wisdom of Jesus Christ. 11.18 - There is an overwhelming sense that Sarah and Chris are being "baptised by dirt" not clear waters; a metaphor that is applicable to the characters of: Jug Face, 23 January 2013, Premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival, 81 minutes, directed by Chad Crawford Kinkle, viz. Ada, acted by Lauren Ashley Carter; Dawai, acted by Sean Bridgers; Jesseby, acted by Daniel Manche; Bodey, acted by Mathieu Whitman, etc. 11.19 - The characters—of what I refer to in reference to the films discussed within this blog—as "the grave-pit films",  in their isolation are comparable to children, who really await their proper coming-of-age through the church, though until such time, remain suffering children.
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Thursday 15 August 2024

PART V. DEEPER BENEATH THE SURFACE: THE PERSECUTION OF CHANGELINGS.

§1.0 - Points 1.0–1.13: THIS BLOG'S CONTENTS:
1.1 - THIS BLOG'S TITLE:
1.2 - PART V. DEEPER BENEATH THE SURFACE: THE PERSECUTION OF CHANGELINGS.
1.3 - THIS BLOG'S LISTED SECTIONS AND NUMBERED POINTS:
1.4 - §2.0: Points 2.0–2.12: THE DISCLAIMER /
1.5 - §3.0: Points 3.0–3.3: THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION /
1.6 - §4.0: Points 4.0–4.21: A BRIEF COMMENTARY REGARDING THIS SERIES OF BLOGS AT 'THOUGHTSDISJECTAMEMBRA' /
1.7 - §5.0: Points 5.0–5.16: SOME VISUAL EXAMPLES OF SUPER-REALISM /
1.8 - §6.0: Points 6.0–6.22: REVISITING THE SUPER-REALIST ÆSTHETIC IN PROSE POETRY AND FILM /
1.9 - §7.0: Points 7.0–7.20: DEEPER BENEATH THE SURFACE: THE PERSECUTION OF CHANGELINGS /
1.10 - §8.0: Points 8.0–8.13: THE WITCHES EXCLUDE THE CHANGELING AND THE CHANGELING EXCLUDE THE WITCHES /
1.11 - §9.0: Points 9.0–9.23: SIMILAR TO THE CHANGELING: THE LOVE-CHILD /
1.12 - §10.0: Points 10.0–10.11: THE NATIVITY OF THE BABY JESUS CHRIST /
1.13 - §11.0: Points 11.0–11.10: A BRIEF AFTER-WORD // 
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§2.0 - THE DISCLAIMER—Points 2.0–2.14.
2.1 - All rights reserved © Craig Steven Joseph Lacey, 4 December 1976–, Australia. 2.2 - Changing the content or re-publishing this blog is strictly prohibited. 2.3 - This blog is protected by the: 2.4 -Privacy Act 1988 of Australia, against unauthorized access to Craig Steven Joseph Lacey's Samsung Galaxy A05s, and Google account; 2.5 - Cybercrime Act 2001 of Australia, against computer fraud or internet fraud; 2.6 - Copyright Act 1968 of Australia, against intellectual property theft; 2.7 - Universal Copyright Convention, circa 1952; 2.8 - Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, 9 September 1886. 2.9 - Fines and/or prosecution will apply according to Australian and International law in reference to unauthorised access and use of this blog published through the Blogger app of Google.com and the author's storage device(s) with the data. 2.10 - Images used in this blog include: 2.11 - At point 5.7, a jpeg of the photograph: Untitled, circa 2005, by Gregory Crewdson, chromogenic print, 144.8 centimetres × 223.5 centimeters, at The Met, Fifth Avenue, New York City, sourced, 15 August 2024, from the URL: <https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/818025>. 2.12 - At point 5.11, a jpeg the photograph: Baby, circa 2000, 26 centimeters x 12.1 centimetres x 5.3 centimetres, of the sculpture by Hans Ronald Mueck, sourced at the Thaddaeus Ropac website, 15 August 2024, from the URL: <https://ropac.net/artists/63-ron-mueck/works/12902/>. 2.13 - At point 5.13, Gilles And Two Flowers, circa 2006, 168 centimeters × 107 centimeters, acrylic on linen, by Ben Schonzeit, sourced at Artsy 15 August 2024, from the URL: <https://www.artsy.net/artwork/ben-schonzeit-giles-and-two-flowers>. 2.14 - At point 6.12, a film still from: You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan, Fantastic Films, that portrays Char, acted by Hazel Doupe, and Rita, acted by Ingrid Craigie, in a window-lit scene at dusk, with Rita's reflection visible in the back-ground, behind Char who is seen listening to to her grand-mother within a lounge space.
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§3.0 - THE DATES OF RESEARCH, WRITING AND ON-LINE PUBLICATION—Points 3.0–3.4.
3.1 - This blog was started with draft notes: 21 April 2023 – 9 May 2023, then re-worked: 7 August 2024 – 15 August 2024. 3.2 - Researched and composed, 21 April 2023 to 15 August 2024, by Craig Steven Joseph Lacey at Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia, 4000. 3.3 - The word count of this blog: 6,183 words and 37,590 characters with spaces. 3.4 - Last up-dated: 02:37, 26 August 2024, Australian Eastern Standard Time.
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4.0 - A BRIEF COMMENTARY REGARDING THIS SERIES OF BLOGS AT 'THOUGHTSDISJECTAMEMBRA'—Refer to Points 4.0–4.21.
4.1 - The cultural representation of the extensive persecution of changelings, going from my experience, is poorly represented because of problems regarding censorship in main-stream Western World culture—and as far as I am aware, a similar case of censorship exists in Eastern World culture. 4.2 - There needs to be greater representation of the changeling superstition and its causes of persecution to white, Anglo-Saxon, Christian—mostly Baptist—children, at least in order to prevent such horrific forms of torture and killing from recurring. 4.3 - In reference to the scarcity of material and my claims of its occurrence, perhaps this matter of the changeling and holocaust is, as the character, the so-called expert, the psychotherapist, Doctor Klemperer—of the film: Suspiria, 7 September 2018, 152 minutes—would announce: "delusion; it's delusion"? 4.4 - As briefly discussed through my blog series, texts that focus upon the changeling: the half-human child, and in a number of cases, half-human adult, exist in less numbers and complexity than the changeling persecution and holocaust deserves in representation—even in the mythified representation it receives. 4.5 - If I write on the matter in greatly historical terms and it becomes demystified to the extent it becomes consequential, there is a problem. 4.6 - Such that by writing on this matter at the prima facie levels—of the folk-lore and æsthetics—its memory at least keeps alive, rather than it fall to the forgotten realms of the world where it will repeat ad infinitum. 4.7 - But may I probe slightly deeper, in reference to my theory of the super-realist style, that I have argued to be an æsthetic of the every-day re-invested with qualities of "the numinous", regarding which, I will re-affirm here now: as an adjective defined as 'evoking a sense of the mystical, sublime, or transcendent; awe-inspiring'. 4.8 - Derived from the noun: 'numen', it refers to: "nod", that means to confer divine will, command or majesty. 4.9 - Comparison can be made to Immanuel Kant's philosophical use of 'noumenon': a Greek term referring to an unknowable reality underlying all things: regarding which refer to: 4.10 - The Critique Of Pure Reason, circa 1781, by Immanuel Kant—and note I have down-loaded a German publication to my Samsung Galaxy A05s: the second edition 1787, in the German language: Kritik Der Reinen Vernunft, circa 1781, that contains closer to the original number of pages, approximately 850, than the English language publications. 4.11 - 'Noumenon' is contrasted with 'phenomenon', the latter of which is concerned with observing the appearances of the world; whereas 'noumenon' refers to the essences of the world, of the thing-in-itself, which remains beyond humanity's precise interpretation, though Immanual Kant indicates the 'noumenon' is connected to the moral order, and morality is a subject discussed in many fields of the humanities and religion that is set aside here for æsthetical and sociological enquiry. 4.12 - The numinous is associated to the noumenon, but there is in reference to the numinous a definition of the divine presence of a thing; a notion explained in reference to: 4.13 - The Idea Of The Holy: An Inquiry In to The Non-Rational Factor In The Idea Of The Divine And Its Relation To The Rational / German: Das Heilige: Über das Irrationale In Der Idee Des Göttlichen Und Sein Verhältnis Zum Rationalen, circa 1917, by the German theologian and philosopher Rudolf Otto; 4.14 - Re-published: 27 June 2021, Wipf And Stock, English language, paper-back, 260 pages, ISBN-10: 1666731404, ISBN-13: 978-1666731408. 4.15 - Rudolf Otto describes the numinous as a Latin: mysterium / mystery, that is at once: 'tremendum' / terrifying and 'fascinans' / fascinating. 4.16 - I argue the super-real æsthetic approaches aspects of this definition of the numinous, particularly as something beyond affect / feelings—as something felt and sensed beyond explanation; as deep mystery. 4.17 - The giallo form with a murder mystery threaded through its films, similar to film noir, regarding which I have discussed in detail in reference to Dario Argento's 'Three Mothers Trilogy', involve a detective mystery that can be solved based on reason, but the giallo form takes such matters of deductive reasoning to a realm that is numinous and defies explanation. 4.18 - It may be that such a realm is that of the censored, viz. censored history—what I have referred to as dark history, regarding which I argue my experience exists as labelled a changeling and being persecuted for it. 4.19 - The æsthetic is a sensory matter that connects to something outside the ambit of language, as experiential, and to a locality / locus, similar to the texts of the urban legend genre, where the truth of a mystery is narrated and explained, and further, there is always a remainder outside explanation and is evoked by the place in which it happened. 4.20 - I discussed in my first blog that the index of repressed memories often corresponds to haunting spaces that exist in such capacities inasmuch that it is kept in the realm of dark history: accessible to some people, though not all people; similar to how the dark web is accessed by some people, though not all people. 4.21 - The persecution of changelings, is an omission that may be over-looked for its intermittent absence within spaces; places; nations; but I hope for such wide-scale ignorance or indifference to change.
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5.0 - SOME VISUAL EXAMPLES OF SUPER-REALISM—Refer to Points 5.0–5.16.
5.1 - The æsthetic is not exactly religious as such (though possibly of a cult), nor of surrealism, nor dadaism. 5.2 - I believe the visual styles of this æsthetic are implemented by a number of artists whose works confer with the cinematography used in the films / television series directly based on the subject of the changeling, such as: 5.3 - The Changeling, 28 March 1980, 107 minutes, directed by Peter Medak; 5.4 - Changeling, 24 October 2008, 142 minutes, directed by Clint Eastwood; 5.5 - You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan; 5.6 - The Changeling, television series, 8 September 2023, created by Kelly Marcel and directed by Melina Matsoukas for Apple TV+—based on the eponymous novel by Victor LaValle. 5.7 - The photography by Gregory Crewdson, born 26 September 1962–, the United States Of America, a further example of which, I have placed directly beneath: 5.8 - Untitled, circa 2005, chromogenic print, 144.8 centimetres × 223.5 centimeters, at The Met, Fifth Avenue, New York City, with the credit line: Promised Gift of Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee, in celebration of the Museum’s 150th Anniversary.
5.9 - The sculpture by Hans Ronald Mueck, born 9 May 1958–, for example: 5.10 - Baby, circa 2000, 26 centimeters x 12.1 centimetres x 5.3 centimetres: the figure depicted by Baby, circa 2000, was taken from a photograph, upside-down, that Hans Ronald Mueck found in a medical text-book of a new-born, held aloft by its feet moments after delivery, the sight of which: ‘set [Hans Ronald Mueck] marvelling at the alien strangeness of these raw, brand-new creatures, and sowed the idea for a work’—refer to: 5.11 - page 75, Ron Mueck: A Girl, circa 2007, by Susanna Greeves and Craig Raine, CAC Malaga, 78 pages, ISBN-10: 8496159523, ISBN-13: 9788496159525. 5.12 - The photograph of the sculpture: Baby, circa 2000, 26 centimeters x 12.1 centimetres x 5.3 centimetres, by Hans Ronald Mueck, born 9 May 1958–, is directly beneath.
5.13 - Paintings of 'momento mori' by Ben Schonzeit, born 9 May 1942–, the United States Of America, for example: 5.14 - Gilles And Two Flowers, circa 2006, 168 centimeters × 107 centimeters; 5.15 - The art of Ben Schonzeit is described as hyper-realist by many theorists, though I argue, because mystery is invested in his work, it bridges super-realism, similar to the enigmatic art-work of: René Magritte.
5.16 - Acknowledge that the list of art-works is indicative rather than exhaustive.
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6.0 - REVISITING THE SUPER-REALIST ÆSTHETIC IN PROSE POETRY AND FILM—Refer to Points 6.0–6.22.
6.1 - There appears to be no exact equivalence to poetry, such as to declare a set of texts of the super-realist poets, rather it is an apparent æsthetic movement. 6.2 - There is prose poetry or the proem form that is itself suggestive of super-realism—for example, the first text to reflect the proem form: 6.3 - Gaspard De La Nuit—Fantaisies À La Manière De Rembrandt Et De Callot / English: Treasurer Of The Night—Fantasies In The Manner Of Rembrandt And Callot, circa 1845, by the Italian-born French poet Aloysius Bertrand, an excerpt of which is provided here: 6.4 - 'C'était un pauvre diable dont l'extérieur n'annonçait que misères et souffrances. J'avais déjà remarqué, dans le même jardin, sa rodingote râpée qui se boutonnait jusqu'au menton, son feutre déformé que jamais brosse n'avait brossé, ses cheveux longs comme un saule, et peignés comme des broussailles, ses mains décharnées, paeilles à des ossuaires, sa physionomie narquoise, chafouine et maladive qu'effilait une barbe nazaréenne; et mes conjectures l'avaient charitablement rangé parmi ces artistes aux petit-pied, joueurs de violon et peintres de portraits, qu'une faim irrassasiable et une soif inextinguible condamnent à courir le monde sur la trace du Juif-errant. / He was a poor devil whose exterior announced only misery and suffering. I had already noticed, in the same garden, his thread-bare rodingote that buttoned up to his chin, his misshapen felt hat that had never been brushed, his hair as long as a willow and combed like brushwood, his emaciated hands, straw-like in ossuaries, his mocking, grumpy and sickly physiognomy that was thinned by a Nazarene beard; and my conjectures had charitably ranked him among those small-footed artists, violin players and portrait painters, whom an unquenchable hunger and an unquenchable thirst condemn to roam the world on the trail of the Wandering Jew'—from: The Project Gutenberg website, sourced: 15 August 2024, at the URL: <https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/17708/pg17708-images.html>. 6.5 - The narration is paused for a moment of conjectural observation upon a character whose description is ladden with imagery and allusions; particularly within the second, long sentence that uses the rhetoric of 'accumulatio', the amassing of signs, to meet with a semi-colon, that conjoins a further sentence fragment, in mirrored reflection to surmise of a philosophical or numinous perspective, that the vagrant man is comparable to the "Wandering Jew". 6.6 - The prose is similar to the poetic form that starts with observations of details which shunt up in to a totalizing philosophical or numinous summation. 6.7 - The writing of Thomas De Quincey has featured in my blogs and I refer again to his prose poetry: Suspiria De Profundis, circa 1845, as excerpted here: 6.8 - 'At midnight the secret word arrived; which word was—Waterloo and Recovered Christendom! The dreadful word shone by its own light; before us it went; high above our leaders’ heads it rode, and spread a golden light over the paths which we traversed. Every city, at the presence of the secret word, threw open its gates. The rivers were conscious as we crossed. All the forests, as we ran along their margins, shivered in homage to the secret word'—from: page 114, Suspiria De Profundis, circa 1845, by Thomas De Quincey: an evocation of Thomas De Quincey's dream, supposedly influenced by laudanum that uses 'pathetic fallacy': the anthropomorphism of the land. 6.9 - 'Pathetic fallacy' is a form of rhetoric that entertains the beliefs of animism, such that, while the whole world is infused with spirit and movement / animation, some localities are more so than others. 6.10 - An approach that is visible in Gregory Crewdson's photography, where the space that surrounds the person portrayed is as evocative, if not more than the portrait of the person in the image—an effect achieved through lighting and visual puns with mirrors and props: the indexical phenomena, viz. the trampled rose petals or flowers, all of which testify of an occurrence that may go unspoken: only known to who experiences it in their "dark hour". 6.11 - In further regard to: You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, premiered at Toronto International Film Festival, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan, the cinematographer Narayan Van Maele uses a similar diffused back lighting interspersed with smaller filler-lights all of which are lit by a low-key lighting scheme within the camera's perspective: that is a similar technique used in Gregory Crewdson's photography that approaches chiaroscuro treatments. 6.12 - Refer to a film still directly beneath from: You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, 93 minutes, in which Char is lit in very low-key lighting, almost cast in silhouette, with a mirror as a visual pun on perspective that suggests her grand-mother demands of Char to be her.
6.13 - Further, as briefly discussed in the blog: <https://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com/2024/03/10-title-part-i-re-films-suspiria-circa.html>: '(A) Protracted: with moments which dwell for too long [on the subject]' and the text being: '(B) Over-edited'—there are counter-expectant dilations upon a subject that involve a mysterious lack of exposition caused by over-editing, the effect of which is to imbue the prolonged meditation with the portentous or numinous. 6.14 - The transition from the static photograph to cinematography involves the dimension of time through which focus upon a narrative is directed: a matter that is closely aligned to the signification of the narrative that exists as a structure that is itself symbolic. 6.15 - There are many film-genre encoded conventions, but a cut in the editing of a sub-plot generally signifies an ending, not necessarily death—and I suspect that audiences unconsciously believe the non-acting actors have gone for a sleep until they are "back on stage" even when film is the medium being used—but also, the cut symbolizes a reformation of sorts, that itself involves an anxiety regarding change. 6.16 - Dario Argento has accentuated the audience's suspense of the murder suggested to occur of Susie, but the cut of film editing partially substitutes for it. 6.17 - Here is the recurring theme of the return of the satyrs also discussed in reference to: <https://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com/2024/03/10-title-part-i-re-films-suspiria-circa.html>, reminiscent of the theatrical form of the masque, in which satyrs exist as perennial "scene shifters" who change the mise-en-scene as animating spirits of the represented locality, but this interpretation is of an animistic belief seemingly ignorant of the technicalities of John Ruskin's theory of rhetoric 'pathetic fallacy'—on which point refer to: 6.18 - Modern Painters, circa 1843 –circa 1860, 5 Volumes, by John Ruskin, re-published: 1 April 1988, Alfred A. Knopf, approximately 232 pages, English Language, ISBN-10: ‎039456846X, ISBN-13: 978-0394568461, and further, on-line: 6.19 - Modern Painters, circa 1856, §5, Part 4, Volume III., circa 1856: <https://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/ruskinj/>. 6.20 - With ever increasingly sophisticated special effects in film which cross-over the traditional boundaries of film convention, audiences are far greater in their skepticism then ever before, and John Ruskin's original significance of 'pathetic fallacy': as a falsely constructed metaphor that perceives inanimate or dead things as truly alive, is often a pact taken with the putative father figure as to accept the mortifying effects of such delusion: where 'delusion' is a belief in something that is untrue. 6.21 - As compared to the truth of the miracles of Jesus Christ which set the soul free: 6.22 - 'A miracle is to be distinguished from wonders wrought by designing men through artful deceptions, occult sciences, or laws of nature unknown except to adepts'—from on-line: "Miracle", The American Tract Society Bible Dictionary portal of the website Bible Hub: <biblehub.com>, sourced, 14 August 2024, from URL: <https://biblehub.com/dictionary/amtract.htm>.
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7.0 - DEEPER BENEATH THE SURFACE: THE PERSECUTION OF CHANGELINGS—Refer to Points 7.0–7.19.
7.1 - Many films of the giallo, super-natural thriller and horror genres, exploit traumatic history and traumatic moments common to many people—however insensitively and cruelly—but there are traumas which exist at the very peripheries of collective memory that have only a ghost-type or residual effect of representation, such as I argue is the case of the history of the changeling. 7.2 - To reach at the truth of the possible racial and religious persecution, such as I myself have experienced by being labelled and mistreated as a changeling, the aspects of the truth of such sensationalized accounts in texts must be brought in to focus by argumentum ex silentio. 7.3 - While the filmic treatment is of fiction, the truth of horrific abuses done to white, Christian children, left orphaned and vulnerable, is the truthful element that by an effect of euhemerism is mythified and sensationalised in the texts, but the censorship causes for the ex silentio; the silent mystery. 7.4 - The changeling of the film: The Changeling, 28 March 1980, 107 minutes, directed by Peter Medak, refers to a spirit connected to an old house that the protagonist buys with his wife, and the house is of a Dutch / West German architectural style and the ghost: a white boy, the home's isolated inheritor, was beaten and made disabled, locked in the attic for his brief life, and, it is inferred, that the servants took the property over and sold it as though it was legally theirs. 7.5 - While strange superstitions entered the people's minds, particularly regarding the orphaned, disabled or marked child, the façade of the Christian way of life was maintained, to indicate a socio-cultural schism. 7.6 - At this point, I further consider Thomas De Quincey's reference, as excerpted above, to 'the secret word' that 'arrived' which was: "Waterloo and Recovered Christendom!" 7.7 - Christianity is still reported as the most populous religion in the world, yet Christendom fell; it was not recovered. 7.8 - The Battle of Waterloo was, along with the Allies' victory during the second world war, exemplary of wars which made the history books; that is, when other unrecorded battles, nip by nip, led to the over-throw of the last Christian nations, arguably as recent as circa 1990. 7.9 - Such battles were conducted at the regional levels, on the domestic and business fronts; not battles as such, but troops of militia, corrupt police or gangs going about and committing massacres, here and there, not all at once, upon the Christians left without husbands and fathers after the war—with fewer yet "Christian remnants", children often left locked-up by foreign domestic servants who had secretly committed "mutiny". 7.10 - Regarding this matter of the early fall of Christendom refer to: 7.11 - The Fall Of Christendom: The Road To Acre 1291, 15 October 2021, by W.B. Bartlett, Amberley Publishing, English Language‎, hard-cover‎, 320 pages, ISBN-10‎: 1445684179, ISBN-13‎: 9781445684178. 7.12 - Once the so-called puritan Christians of the Baptist creeds opened wide gates to extend to our fellow humans, in the gist of humanism, our cities, townships and rural lands, and despite being depleted in numbers after the second world war, nonetheless were exploited and murdered, as though none of it happened. 7.13 - This is because of the justification made by the perpetrators, that such whites deserved it: they were getting back what was done to the blacks. 7.14 - Many "blacks" applied racism upon "whites" because they assumed all whites were the same in racism against them, but there were different whites; a point of which I have written in this series of blogs in reference to the Celts / Galls and Aryans / Assyrians, between who persecutions occurred and the Celtic Christians were the least racist of people. 7.15 - Ethnic difference as a matter of skin colour set aside, it became a matter of superstitious or religious persecution, as the notion of changelings refers to a belief that the real son or daughter has been taken by goblins who left an impostor and deformed goblin-child or fairy-child in its place. 7.16 - My experience, as I can remember, is that the pervasiveness of the persecution of changelings during the 1970s until the 1990s was almost all-encompassing, yet according to historical documents from various nations, and further fictionalized texts, the changeling persecution, if it occurred, occurred randomly and infrequently—if at all. 7.17 - At this point in time, my blogs engage with similar sorts of critical discourses as the so-called structuralists, such as Roland Barthes or Jacques Derrida, who analyse the 'text' for cultural and sociological  significance that "make room for difference", rather than censure interpretations that are incompatible with the establishment. 7.18 - The further film: Changeling, 24 October 2008, 142 minutes, directed by Clint Eastwood, is well-known to be based on historical fact, viz. on the Wineville Chicken Coop serial killer, circa 1926 – circa 1928, viz. Gordon Stewart Northcott with his mother, Sarah Louise Northcott, of Jurupa Valley, California, 91752, regarding which I briefly passed comment in this blog: 7.19 - '11.5 – There is no problem of racial integration or cultural / ethnic territorialities at 1920s California—quite unbelievably—on which point, the usurpation of white boys for other "white" boys, may not necessarily have correlation to a myth, but a gradual usurpation; an invasion of attrition at the neighbourhood scale, conducted "just quietly" amid the lucrative Western World society of California. 11.6 – The media has been involved to sort of record it and mitigate it, as might propaganda be used, sensationally, as an extension of folk-lore: the truth always refers to a conspiracy which must be denied, mythified or brocaded in style'—from: <https://thoughtsdisjectamembra.blogspot.com/2023/04/part-i-craig-steven-joseph-laceys.html>.
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8.0 - THE WITCHES EXCLUDE THE CHANGELING AND THE CHANGELING EXCLUDE THE WITCHES—Refer to Points 8.0–8.13.
8.1 - A formulation of almost mutual exclusion arguably is found in relation to not only texts involved in the narration of the changeling, but the witch also. 8.2 - It may be discerned that where one is portrayed as in the twilight and shadows of the world, the other is centre-stage—a divide upon the traditional Christian notions of motherhood, and we are to accept this injustice as an effect of modernization rather than the witch-craft religions. 8.3 - One of the reasons I write often in reference to the film: 8.4 - You Are Not My Mother, 13 September 2021, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, 93 minutes, directed by Kate Dolan, Fantastic Films, Ireland; 8.5 - is because it represents the exception of an integrated narrative of the changeling and witch, though, as discussed, both are represented in a subdued, repressed context—as an effect of over-editing—and as though a hidden figure, "Mephistopheles", lurks behind the cinema's screen itself: such a figure could as easily be Josef Stalin or Mao Zedong or any other brutal dictator. 8.6 - Char must, according to the unspoken lore, burn her changeling mother in order to become a witch and this is a reversal of "mutterrecht", as to indicate that the witch has been involved in killing infants or children, who could be described as bastards of a foreign heritage. 8.7 - One of the great mythic narratives of the witch is based on the witch, Medea, as celebrated by the texts: 8.8 - Medea, 432 B.C., a play of a tragedy by the Ancient Greek playwright Euripides, that was adapted to film in: 8.9 - Medea, 1 April 1988 Denmark, 76 minutes, directed by Lars von Trier with a screen-play by Carl Theodor Dreyer. 8.10 - Further there is: Argonautica, 3rd century, by Apollonius of Rhodes, the epic; re-published, circa 2008, translated by Robin Hard, Oxford University Press, 336 pages, ISBN-10: 0199536325, ISBN-13: 9780199536320. 8.11 - Within such texts, Medea is the archetypal helper-maiden who initially assists Jason in his task of retrieving the golden fleece because, it is inferred, of her love for him, such as to indicate her later marriage and children with Jason symbolize a romantic love pact. 8.12 - After ten years of marriage Medea rises up for revenge, when Jason declares he will marry the Corinthian king's daughter and organise for their children to live with him, because she murders their children and King Creon's daughter, later to re-settle at Iran. 8.13 - The mother's filicide appears to be influenced by her feelings towards the children's father, such as the pathos for revenge and wrath, rather than be a gesture, at the very beginning, of a witch-craft "religion".
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9.0 - SIMILAR TO THE CHANGELING: THE LOVE-CHILD—Refer to Points 9.0–9.23.
9.1 - A 'love-child' is an hyphenated compound noun used as an euphemism to refer to a child born out of wed-lock, but who is a result of a romantic affair, rather than a "lusty fling". 9.2 - The love-child is of an extra-marital affair of true and passionate romance, such as to symbolise the famed, though often secret love between the involved couple. 9.3 - Because the affair is outside of the laws of marriage, the notion of love as an honourable or chivalric ideal and experience, as of courtly love, becomes symbolic of infidelity and betrayal in the context of the third, married partner. 9.4 - The love-child symbolizes the abandons of love's passion for breaking the rules of marriage, inasmuch is shamed, nonetheless is perceived as holding the seed to the truth of love as a transcendence to the rules. 9.5 - The more famed of folk-lore on the subject of a loving extra-marital affair is that of the Arthurian Legend, viz. involving Sir Lancelot and Queen Guinevere, possibly most celebrated by the 12th-century Old French poem by Chrétien de Troyes: 9.6 - Lancelot, The Knight Of The Cart / French: Lancelot, Le Chevalier De La Charrette; re-published as: Lancelot, Or, The knight Of The Cart, circa 1990, translated by Ruth Harwood Cline, Athens: University of Georgia Press, xxxiv, 231 pages, ISBN 0820312126, ISBN 0820312134—from which judgment is often cast against the maiden for her loose morals, though the mediæval revivalist William Morris wrote the poem: 9.7 - The Defence Of Guinevere, circa 1858—refer to the John Lane publication, circa 1904, 54 pages, illustrated by Jessie M.King; 9.8 - Re-published: 14 February 2006, Obscure Press, English Language, 252 pages, ISBN-10: 1846644321, ISBN-13: 9781846644320. 9.9 - Yet references to children born of passionate love are scarcely found among literature; hence, there is no description of a child born out of true love, such as imaginably would have occurred in the Arthurian Legend: no child born from the parents of such courtly, passionate, Romance. 9.10 - Such texts weave the subjects of desire and love around couples in an almost delicate way to avoid "the complication" of a new-born. 9.11 - The genre of English romantic literature arguably begins with the 18th century epistolary novel: 9.12 - Pamela; Or, Virtue Rewarded, circa 1740, by Samuel Richardson; re-published: circa 1981, Penguin Classics, 544 pages, ISBN-10: 0140431403, ISBN-13: 9780140431407—through to the romantically iconic: 9.13 - Sense And Sensibility, circa 1811, by Jane Austen; re-published 07 December 2023, Thomas Nelson Publishers, Harper Muse Australia, 432 pages, ISBN: 9781400339686, ISBN-10: 1400339685, and the historical romance: 9.14 - The Black Moth, circa 1921, by Georgette Heyer—26 August 2021, Cornerstone, William Heinemann Ltd., 336 pages, ISBN: 9781785152399—through to the later mass-market: 9.15 - Romance literature of Mills And Boon of Harlequin Enterprises ULC, such as: 9.16 - Song In The Night, circa September 1984, first edition, Silhouette Special Edition 188, Mills And Boon, paper-back, ISBN: 0671536885, ISBN13: 9780671536886. 9.17 - The further, contemporary allusion of the noun: 'love-child' is to the notion of the conception of a child born outside of wed-lock being a "mistake" of judgment, that is often attributed to the clouding stirred by fallible passion; that is typically an error placed upon the mother, her being the bearer of the infant, such that the unborn child is organised to be medically aborted to prevent the child's birth. 9.18 - The allusion to the 'love-child' is ironically applied in this context because of the demands to abort the child made from the surrounding family or community of the involved couple—when the unborn child has then become a child of shame and is thus unwanted and unpaid for, often forced in to the "accursed" life within institutional care, because the child is given up to adoption where abuses are known to occur. 9.19 - Refer to the Australian drama-genre, television series titled: 9.20 - Love Child, 17 February 2014 – 4 July 2017, 48 minutes, 36 episodes, by Sarah Lambert, Channel 9, that portrays the lives of staff and residents of the fictional Kings Cross Hospital and Stanton House in Sydney, circa 1969 and continuing into the 1970s, based on the true history of forced adoption within Australia at that time, for which former Prime Minister Julia Gillard offered a national apology to who was affected, circa 2013. 9.21 - Further, there is the film: 9.22 - Love Child, 15 October 1982, 96 minutes, directed by Larry Peerce, written by Anne Gerard and Katherine Specktor, by The Ladd Company; 9.23 - Based on the life of Terry-Jean Moore, in which the female protagonist, while she serves a conviction sentence, fights to keep her love-child who is conceived with one of the prison guards.
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10.0 - THE NATIVITY OF THE BABY JESUS CHRIST—Refer to Points 10.0–10.11.
10.1 - Jesus Christ of the Nativity is symbolic of the new born: a soul brought from Heaven to the Earthly plane who is of the great gift of God to human-kind: God's gift, the gift of life. 10.2 - With the birth of Jesus Christ there is the greatest cause for rejoicing; for the birth of Jesus Christ is the promise of the Messiah fulfilled: Jesus Christ, the only son of God, brought to earth to give the world wisdom. 10.3 - For it is in wisdom that true wealth is accrued and true wisdom holds that life is verily precious, above all else in value, and a child, even with imperfections is valuable as one of God's own children, with soul and spirit worthy of the deepest respect. 10.4 - Some people will argue love is a delusion; that the reality is, there is only cruelty, pain and suffering. 10.5 - Love is full of pain and suffering, yet love exists—love is pleasurable too; too complex to reduce to only sensations. 10.6 - Through God's love there is a higher path to travel and that is made manifest through Jesus Christ. 10.7 - I have written in my previous blog of an artificial apocalypse—an apocalypse that was intended to end all anticipations of an apocalypse—but it was far from The Second Coming of Jesus Christ as of The Book of Revelation, that remains yet fulfilled. 10.8 - 'I, Jesus, have sent my angel to testify to you about these things for the churches'—from: Revelation 22:16, English Standard Version10.9 - If only change that brought pain and suffering could be prevented; if only changelings who supposedly bring change could be banished once and for all. 10.10 - 'If a man dies, shall he live again? All the days of my service I would wait, till my change should come'—from: Job 14:14, English Standard Version. 10.11 - If some-one could change oneself and be the change that he or she prays to witness in the world, then, it is a matter of imitating Jesus Christ.
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11.0 - A BRIEF AFTER-WORD—Refer to Points 11.0–11.11.
11.1 - I wrote almost the exact same blog as this blog five years ago and it was removed from my Google Blogger account, unlawfully, and the storage device with the data was confiscated by the Brisbane City Police of Queensland, Australia. 11.2 - Much of my research and writing—I write much greater than these blogs—stored on my data storage devices, is taken with other items by police. 11.3 - Due to identity theft, I fight for my identity, that is, while I am sick with multiple cancers and only extended half-hearted care. 11.4 - Money is owed to myself, but the people who owe myself payments state: "why re-pay him if I do not have to?" 11.5 - Forced out of Sydney and Brisbane universities for being physically sick, I am almost ostracised as though I am once again: "the changeling among the witches"—or whatever they are. 11.6 - I suspect that the people who I have alluded to in these blogs are those same people involved in proto-typic Satanic forms of sect congregation—cults with shared delusion are not harmless fantasies, because they have often dire consequences, as these blogs indicate. 11.7 - Certainly, they have been involved in 'The Church of Scientology': that cult that removed the dark scriptures' allusions to Satan (at some point Vulcan became Satan and both are interchangeable), such that Satanic Ritual Abuse became "Ritual Abuse". 11.8 - Their power is based on enslavement; and slavery—whether defined as volunteer work or work done as a matter of family ties—is against Australian and international law, such as stated in the: 11.9 - Modern Slavery Act 2018, Number 153, of Australia, and: 11.10 - The International Covenant On Civil And Political Rights, circa 1966. 11.11How law and order can be metéd out in such an intermixture of law and lore; culture and sub-culture; corruption and "corruption"; could be the sixty-four million dollar question.
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