<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://repozitorij.upr.si/IzpisGradiva.php?id=22522"><dc:title>The Poetic Documentary as an Affective Configuration of Thinking-in-Proximity</dc:title><dc:creator>Krajnc,	Maja	(Avtor)
	</dc:creator><dc:subject>poetic documentary</dc:subject><dc:subject>dispositif</dc:subject><dc:subject>hesitation</dc:subject><dc:subject>affect</dc:subject><dc:subject>A Tree Grows in My Dreams Every Night</dc:subject><dc:description>This article considers the poetic documentary as a dispositif that does not think in language, but in touch-in rhythms, in auditory tensions, in visual suspensions where the image does not speak but endures. Taking Vid Hajnšek’s A Tree Grows in My Dreams Every Night (V mojih sanjah rase vsako noč drevo, 2024) as its central case study, the article explores how a film – when it relinquishes narration and representation – can create the conditions in which thought no longer unfolds as conceptual reflection, but as an embodied orientation in a world that emerges within the frame. Perception is not treated as mediation between subject and object, but as a mode of being in which the body lingers in affect. The key concept is hesitation – as a tension that does not interrupt, but reconfigures the relation between image and body. The film does not ask what truth is, but how it might act – not as explanation, but as presence. Merging a phenomenological framework (Merleau-Ponty, Sobchack, Marks, Massumi, Sontag) with formal analysis (of framing, rhythm, sound, and texture), the article proposes that the poetic documentary does not produce knowledge, but generates the conditions in which thinking can happen – as affect, as duration, as proximity.</dc:description><dc:date>2025</dc:date><dc:date>2026-01-22 09:35:03</dc:date><dc:type>Članek v reviji</dc:type><dc:identifier>22522</dc:identifier><dc:language>sl</dc:language></rdf:Description></rdf:RDF>
