%0 Journal Article %A Blanton, Ward %D 2017 %T Biblical scholarship in the age of bio-power: Albert Schweitzer and the degenerate physiology of the historical Jesus %U https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Biblical_scholarship_in_the_age_of_bio-power_Albert_Schweitzer_and_the_degenerate_physiology_of_the_historical_Jesus/4923281 %R 10.4225/03/590149a2ae692 %2 https://bridges.monash.edu/ndownloader/files/8281796 %K Albert Schweitzer %K monash:110422 %K 1832-3391 %K journal article %K 10.2104/bc060006 %K Noir biblical criticism %K 1959.1/789303 %K Noir film %K Historical Jesus %X Cinema Theory has for a long time been haunted by the question: is noir a genre of its own kind or a kind of anamorphic distortion affecting different genres? From the very beginning, noir was not limited to hard-boiled detective stories: reverberations of noir motifs are easily discernible in comedies (Arsenic and Old Lace), in westerns (Pursued), in political and social dramas (All the Kings Men, The Lost Weekend), etc. Do we have here a secondary impact of something that originally constitutes a genre of its own (the noir crime universe), or is the crime film only one of the possible fields of application of the noir logic? That is, is noir a predicate that entertains toward the crime universe the same relationship as toward comedy or western, a kind of logical operator introducing the same anamorphic distortion in every genre to which it is applied, so that finding its strongest application in the crime film turns on nothing but historical contingency (iek, Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology, 1993, pp. 9-10)? Copyright 2005 Ward Blanton. No part of this article may be reproduced by any means without the written consent of the publisher. %I Monash University