本土监视电影:印度教育与银幕上的逃学者

Joshua D. Miner
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摘要

最近的土著寄宿学校电影强调了监视的表现,并以“活死人”为中心主题。在简要回顾了印度教育中的监控之后,本文考察了一系列电影——《唯一的好印第安人》(2009)、《野蛮人》(2009)、《死人不会跳舞》(2010)、《为年轻食尸鬼押韵》(2013)和《SNIP》(2016)——其中,监控的实践和技术调解了移民教育机构与土著逃跑者或逃学者之间的动态相互作用。这些电影将一个流行的不死主题与这个长期存在的土著/第一民族儿童对移民管理系统的抵抗类型融合在一起,借鉴了其文学形式,可以追溯到第一个土著关于联邦印第安教育的写作。在这个我们可以称之为本土监视电影的更大领域内,官僚理性的话语构建了逃学者的形象。这些电影阐明了从识字到电影的代表性实践坚持身份识别系统的方式,通过这种系统,对土著人民的行政监督仍在继续。对土著身体的监督的电影表现让人想起定居者殖民主义动员了一系列早期监视技术来同化土著儿童。在这种情况下,教师的警惕之眼——行政媒介的代理——表明在定居者的控制系统中有更深的嵌入。一种逃学的视觉诗学出现在土著监视电影中,逃学的形象与定居者的监视辩证地运作。逃学者将定居者的管理和监视空间化,以逃避这些激增的表现技术手中的文化转换。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Indigenous Surveillance Cinema: Indian Education and the Truant On-Screen
Recent Indigenous boarding school movies have emphasized representations of surveillance together with the “living dead” as a central motif. After a brief review of surveillance in Indian education, this essay examines a cycle of films—The Only Good Indian (2009), Savage (2009), The Dead Can’t Dance (2010), Rhymes for Young Ghouls (2013), and SNIP (2016)—wherein the practices and technologies of surveillance mediate a dynamic interplay between settler educational institutions and the Native runaway or truant. These films converge a popular undead motif with this longstanding genre figure of resistance by Native/First Nations children to settler systems of administration, drawing on its literary formation that extends back to the first Indigenous writing on federal Indian education. Within this larger field of what we may call Indigenous surveillance cinema, discourses of bureaucratic rationality frame the figure of the truant. These films articulate the ways that representational practices ranging from literacy to cinema uphold systems of identification by which administrative surveillance of Indigenous people continues. Cinematic representations of the supervision of Indigenous bodies recall settler-colonialism’s mobilization of an array of early surveillance technologies for the assimilation of Native children. In this context, the watchful eye of the teacher—a proxy for administrative media—suggests a deeper embedding in settler systems of control. A visual poetics of truancy emerges in Indigenous surveillance cinema, as the truant figure operates dialectically with settler surveillance. The truant spatializes settler management and surveillance in her desire to escape cultural conversion at the hands of these proliferating technologies of representation.
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