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Articles

White paranoia: Michael Haneke’s Caché reflected through Alain Robbe-Grillet’s novel La Jalousie

 

ABSTRACT

Inspired by Alain Robbe-Grillet’s novel La Jalousie (1957), the essay contends that Michael Haneke’s Caché (2005) takes its viewers inside a postcolonial white paranoia which is, arguably, the root cause of the exclusion, segregation and racist discrimination that many immigrants from the former colonies – and their children – are experiencing in contemporary France. It suggests that the entire film be read as the protagonist’s paranoid vision that imagines white privileges to be menaced by some non-white conspiracy. His obsession, which hinges on a fear of a reversal of the power inherent in ‘the gaze’, as brought out in the central ‘stalking plot’, informs the entire film’s narration and audiovisual make-up and explains, among other things, the serial repetitions and variations of certain settings and objects as the protagonist’s desperate attempt to create order in a threatening world. The construction of the film, however, also allows Haneke to critically comment upon his protagonist’s paranoia and demonstrate its ill-foundedness, for instance by pointing to a possible ‘banal conviviality’ (Paul Gilroy) between people of different ethnicities, cultures and religions.

Notes

1. In the interview Serge Toubiana conducted with the director for the Artificial Eye DVD version of Caché, Haneke specifies that it was a documentary on the French-German television channel ARTE two years earlier that first drew his attention to the October 1961 massacre, ‘I was incredibly shocked: I said, “How is it possible in 1961 to have 200 people die in the Seine and nobody talk about it for years and years?”. I was so angry that I said, “We must talk about it in this context”’.

2. I owe the analysis of the hallway scenes to Thomas Y. Levin (Citation2010).

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