Yasmine dir, S. Kamaluddin, D. B. Starrs, Sharia Law
{"title":"Authentic Muslima, the national imaginary of Bruneian cinema and Yasmine (dir. Siti Kamaluddin 2014)","authors":"Yasmine dir, S. Kamaluddin, D. B. Starrs, Sharia Law","doi":"10.1080/17503175.2016.1175047","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Amid concerns about the disappearance of national/cultural specificity due to globalisation, this paper questions the notion of Bruneian cinema as a distinct (if emerging) nationalised imaginary, using the example of Brunei’s first feature-length commercial film, Yasmine (Siti Kamaluddin 2014). Many Asian cinemas have de-territorialised, obsequiously promoting the secular, democratic norms of mainstream Hollywood, but the Sultanate, with its national philosophy of MIB (Malay Islamic Monarchy) and its recent implementation of Sharia Law, would, some Western critics apparently expect, push Islamic ideologies for its state-sanctioned media, including traditionally repressive, misogynistic expectations of the ‘authentic’ Muslima [Ahmed, Leila. 1999. “Women Living under Muslim Laws, Dossier 25.” A Border Passage. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. http://wrrc.wluml.org/node/465]. As with some Middle Eastern countries, such Western critics suggest, Bruneian women may be forced to cover themselves; abstain from driving, education or other means of self-empowerment; and submit to harsh, court-imposed punishments for sexual promiscuity; with the media duly promoting such norms. At the very least, Brunei’s entertainment media might soon resemble Islamic Turkey’s ‘Milli cinema’, which ‘brought Islam back into the movies and showed respect for Islam [and in which a] common theme [ … ] was to show characters that had adopted western values but who became unhappy and unsatisfied by those values’ [Yorulmaz, Bilal, and William L. Blizek. 2014. “Islam in Turkish Cinema.” Journal of Religion and Film 18 (2): 8]. What then of Yasmine, a Brunei government-funded film from a female director about a martial arts-obsessed schoolgirl who happily defies her father, rarely wears a veil, enthusiastically chases boys and drives a racy, eye-catching car? I ask how this national cultural artefact sits within the theocracy’s attempts to maintain its citizenry’s adherence to the tenets of Islam, given its foregrounding of a narrative promoting female self-empowerment? Furthermore, this paper asks why Brunei has failed to ride the digital film-making revolution, to the extent Lacaba states ‘Brunei has no film industry to speak of’ [2000. The Films of ASEAN. ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information]. Inconclusively perhaps, I propose this recent advance stems from a benevolent monarch’s commendable efforts to modernise, rather than historicise, Islam in Brunei generally and MIB, including Sharia Law, specifically, or else is part of an elaborate ruse to convince the Western world that women will not become second-class citizens in the new Brunei, ruled as it may be according to traditionally barbaric and misogynistic Sharia Law.","PeriodicalId":51952,"journal":{"name":"Studies in Australasian Cinema","volume":"10 1","pages":"278 - 292"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2016-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1080/17503175.2016.1175047","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Studies in Australasian Cinema","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17503175.2016.1175047","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
ABSTRACT Amid concerns about the disappearance of national/cultural specificity due to globalisation, this paper questions the notion of Bruneian cinema as a distinct (if emerging) nationalised imaginary, using the example of Brunei’s first feature-length commercial film, Yasmine (Siti Kamaluddin 2014). Many Asian cinemas have de-territorialised, obsequiously promoting the secular, democratic norms of mainstream Hollywood, but the Sultanate, with its national philosophy of MIB (Malay Islamic Monarchy) and its recent implementation of Sharia Law, would, some Western critics apparently expect, push Islamic ideologies for its state-sanctioned media, including traditionally repressive, misogynistic expectations of the ‘authentic’ Muslima [Ahmed, Leila. 1999. “Women Living under Muslim Laws, Dossier 25.” A Border Passage. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. http://wrrc.wluml.org/node/465]. As with some Middle Eastern countries, such Western critics suggest, Bruneian women may be forced to cover themselves; abstain from driving, education or other means of self-empowerment; and submit to harsh, court-imposed punishments for sexual promiscuity; with the media duly promoting such norms. At the very least, Brunei’s entertainment media might soon resemble Islamic Turkey’s ‘Milli cinema’, which ‘brought Islam back into the movies and showed respect for Islam [and in which a] common theme [ … ] was to show characters that had adopted western values but who became unhappy and unsatisfied by those values’ [Yorulmaz, Bilal, and William L. Blizek. 2014. “Islam in Turkish Cinema.” Journal of Religion and Film 18 (2): 8]. What then of Yasmine, a Brunei government-funded film from a female director about a martial arts-obsessed schoolgirl who happily defies her father, rarely wears a veil, enthusiastically chases boys and drives a racy, eye-catching car? I ask how this national cultural artefact sits within the theocracy’s attempts to maintain its citizenry’s adherence to the tenets of Islam, given its foregrounding of a narrative promoting female self-empowerment? Furthermore, this paper asks why Brunei has failed to ride the digital film-making revolution, to the extent Lacaba states ‘Brunei has no film industry to speak of’ [2000. The Films of ASEAN. ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information]. Inconclusively perhaps, I propose this recent advance stems from a benevolent monarch’s commendable efforts to modernise, rather than historicise, Islam in Brunei generally and MIB, including Sharia Law, specifically, or else is part of an elaborate ruse to convince the Western world that women will not become second-class citizens in the new Brunei, ruled as it may be according to traditionally barbaric and misogynistic Sharia Law.
在对全球化导致的民族/文化特殊性消失的担忧中,本文以文莱第一部长篇商业电影《亚斯明》(Siti Kamaluddin 2014)为例,质疑文莱电影作为一种独特的(如果新兴的)国有化想象的概念。许多亚洲电影院已经去领土化,谄谀地促进主流好莱坞的世俗,民主规范,但是苏丹国,凭借其MIB(马来伊斯兰君主制)的国家哲学和最近实施的伊斯兰教法,一些西方评论家显然期望,将伊斯兰意识形态推向其国家认可的媒体,包括传统上压抑的,对“真正的”穆斯林的厌恶女性的期望[Ahmed, Leila. 1999]。"生活在穆斯林法律下的女性,档案25 "边境通道。法拉,斯特劳斯和吉鲁。http://wrrc.wluml.org/node/465]。像一些中东国家一样,这些西方评论家认为,文莱妇女可能会被迫遮盖自己;避免驾驶、教育或其他自我授权的方式;并接受严厉的法院对性乱交的惩罚;媒体适时地宣传这些规范。至少,文莱的娱乐媒体可能很快就会像伊斯兰土耳其的“Milli cinema”一样,“将伊斯兰教重新带入电影中,展现对伊斯兰教的尊重,其中一个共同主题是展现那些接受西方价值观,但对这些价值观感到不满和不满意的角色”[Yorulmaz, Bilal, and William L. Blizek, 2014]。"土耳其电影中的伊斯兰教"宗教与电影学报18(2):8。那么,一部由文莱政府出资、由一位女导演执导的电影《亚斯明》(Yasmine)又如何呢?这部电影讲述了一个痴迷武术的女学生,她愉快地反抗父亲,很少戴面纱,热情地追逐男孩,开着一辆性感、引人注目的汽车。我问,鉴于宣扬女性自我赋权的叙事前景,这个国家的文化产物是如何在神权政治中保持公民对伊斯兰教义的坚持的?此外,本文还提出了一个问题,为什么文莱未能驾驭数字电影制作革命,以至于Lacaba认为“文莱根本没有电影业可言”[2000]。东盟电影。东盟文化和信息委员会]。我认为,这一最近的进步可能是出于一位仁慈的君主值得称赞的努力,他将文莱的伊斯兰教和MIB(特别是伊斯兰教法)现代化,而不是历史化,或者是一个精心策划的计谋的一部分,以说服西方世界,在新的文莱,妇女不会成为二等公民,因为它可能是根据传统上野蛮和厌恶女性的伊斯兰教法来统治的。