“He Who Laughs Last!” Terrorists, Nihilists, and Jokers

William S. Chavez, Luke McCracken
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Abstract

Since his debut in 1940, the Joker, famed adversary of the Batman, continues to permeate the American cultural mediascape not merely as an object of consumption but as an ongoing production of popular imagination. Joker mythmakers post-1986 have reimagined the character not as superhuman but as “depressingly ordinary,” inspiring audiences both to empathize with his existential plight and to fear his terroristic violence as an increasingly compelling model of reactionary resistance to institutionality. This article examines the recent history of modern terrorism in conjunction with the “pathological nihilism” diagnosed by Nietzsche in order to elucidate the stakes and implications of the Joker’s legacy and popularity. Our analyses of the Joker lead us to conclude that “lone wolf” terrorism is an inherent affordance of a politically pluralistic society, a morally relativistic culture that stresses self-determination and authenticity as top priorities. These values impact “lone wolves” like the Joker in their function as media-driven auteur killers--striving for post-mortem recognition and dissemination. Todd Phillips’ Joker (2019) then proposes that this type of criminal can ironically result from a media-induced contagion, a discursive fear propagated by twenty-four-hour news cycles that incidentally creates a path for the socially impotent to make their television debuts.
“谁笑到最后!”恐怖分子、虚无主义者和小丑
自1940年首次亮相以来,小丑,蝙蝠侠的著名对手,不仅作为消费对象,而且作为大众想象的持续产物,继续渗透到美国的文化媒体中。1986年后,小丑的神话制造者们把这个角色重新塑造成一个“令人沮丧的普通人”,而不是超人,这既激发了观众对他的生存困境的同情,也让他们担心,他的恐怖主义暴力行为是一种日益引人注目的反抗体制的反动模式。本文结合尼采诊断的“病态虚无主义”,考察了现代恐怖主义的近史,以阐明小丑的遗产和受欢迎程度的利害关系和含义。我们对小丑的分析让我们得出这样的结论:“独狼”恐怖主义是一个政治多元化社会的内在动力,是一个道德相对主义的文化,强调自决和真实性是首要任务。这些价值观影响着像小丑这样的“独狼”,因为他们是媒体驱动的导演杀手——努力争取死后的认可和传播。托德·菲利普斯(Todd Phillips)的《小丑》(Joker, 2019)随后提出,具有讽刺意味的是,这种类型的罪犯可能是由媒体引发的传染造成的,这是一种24小时新闻循环传播的话语恐惧,偶然为社会无能的人创造了首次在电视上露面的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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