'Mise en abyme' (also ''mise en abîme'') has several meanings in the realm of the creative arts and literary theory. The term is originally from the
French and means, "placing into infinity" or "placing into the abyss". The commonplace usage of this phrase is describing the visual experience of standing between two mirrors, seeing an infinite reproduction of one's image.
In
Western art "mise en abyme" is a formal technique in which an image contains a smaller copy of itself, the sequence appearing to recur infinitely. The term originated in
heraldry, describing a
coat of arms that appears as a smaller shield in the center of a larger one. See
Droste effect.
In
film, the meaning of "mise en abyme" is similar to the artistic definition, but also includes the idea of a "dream within a dream". For example, a character awakens from a dream and later discovers that he or she is
still dreaming. Activities similar to dreaming, such as unconsciousness and virtual reality, are also described as "mise en abyme". This is seen in the film ''
eXistenZ'' where the two protagonists never truly know whether or not they are out of the game.
In
literary criticism, "mise en abyme" is a type of
frame story, in which the main narrative can be used to encapsulate some aspect of the framing story. The term is used in
deconstruction, and deconstructive literary criticism as a paradigm of the
intertextual nature of language, the way language never quite reaches the foundation of reality, because it refers in a frame-within-a-frame way to other language, which refers to other language, et cetera.
The ability of computers to so repeat a task has led to modern forms of this technique: screen savers that fly through space forever, looping and churning tunnels, or unique images such as a commonly-linked animation of
David Hasselhoff.
[1]
See also
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Gödel, Escher, Bach
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Recursion
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Story within a story
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Macbeth (1971 film)
References
1. David Hasselhoff Crotch loop (Warning: may be considered "adult content")