"Gidget on the Couch" is a work that "takes the specific affordances of its form – that of the video essay – seriously, including elements that are literally only possible on video, such as watching the author move through a variety of non-traditional on-screen academic personae: detective, surfer, fan. Lunenfeld travels the city in search of existing historical threads by which to tie together the loose ends of his story, mapping traces of the Austro-Hungarian empire from the Hollywood Hills to the beaches of Malibu. The graphics that subtend Lunenfeld's vehicular traversals are marked not by the geographic specificity of Southern California, but by conceptual touchpoints within his remapped history, reminiscent of the Situationist practice of navigating one urban environment using the map of another.
Like all good contrarians, Lunenfeld sets out to challenge the received wisdom surrounding his object of study and, by proposing an outlandish inversion – say, that Southern California surfing culture derives from early 20th century Europe rather than the island cultures of Polynesia – invites viewers to think differently about the forms and conventions of scholarly practice. Like the Situationists, Lunenfeld aspires not necessarily to achieve the literal truth of the past but to expose the systems underlying the pathogenesis of historical narratives writ large." – Steve Anderson, Vectors Editor
1 COPY IN THE NEXT
Published in Summer, 2012 by Vectors in Volume 3, Issue 2.
This copy was given to the Electronic Literature Lab by Erik Loyer in November of 2021.
PUBLICATION TYPE
Online Journal
COPY MEDIA FORMAT
Web