好莱坞畸形的男性身体:泰山、洛奇和奎迪

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Delia Malia Konzett
{"title":"好莱坞畸形的男性身体:泰山、洛奇和奎迪","authors":"Delia Malia Konzett","doi":"10.1080/10509208.2023.2261358","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes1 See Michael Rogin. 1996. Blackface, White Noise: Jewish Immigrants in the Hollywood Melting Pot; Richard Dyer. Citation1997. White; Daniel Bernardi. Citation1996. Ed. Race and the Emergence of U.S. Cinema; Bernardi Citation2001. Ed. Classic Hollywood Classic Whiteness.2 See James Baldwin. Citation1975. The Devil Finds Work; bell hooks.1996. Reel to Real. Race, class and sex at the movies; Cedric J. Robinson. 2007. Forgeries of Memory & Meaning: Blacks & The Regime of Race in American Theater & Film Before World War II; Ellen C. Scott. 2015. Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era3 The Devil Finds Work 1975, 41.4 See Donald Bogle’s extensive study of minstrelsy stereotypes informing the representation of Black characters in Hollywood: Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films.5 See Susan Courtney’s discussion of Jack Johnson’s prize fights and their public reception as well as the ensuing censorship of them in 1912 ending their national dissemination, particularly chapter 2 “The Mixed Birth of ‘Great White’ Masculinity and the Classical Spectator” (Hollywood Fantasies 2004, 30-61).6 Johnny Weissmuller came on the scene as a white swimming miracle, beating the Native Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku, the reigning Olympic champion, at the 1924 summer Olympics in Paris. Kahanamoku, known as the father of modern surfing, had dominated the swimming sport, not unlike Jack Johnson in boxing, since 1912. After ending his swimming career, he also went into the film industry and played minor stereotyped roles, most notably in Wake of the Red Witch (1948), starring as the head of a Polynesian tribe alongside John Wayne. Unlike Weissmuller, he was never given a lead role in line with Hollywood’s racially divided casting practices.7 See my essay “The South Pacific as the Final Frontier: Hollywood’s South Seas Fantasies, the Beachcomber, and Militarization,” 13-25. Cinematic Settlers: The Settler Colonial World in Film. Eds. Janne Lahti and Rebecca Weaver-Hightower. 2020. The beachcomber, as I maintain, is an expression of a civilizational drop-out indulging in a fantasy of South Seas escapism. The 1930s also gives birth to the Charlie Chan series with its attempt, not unlike Tarzan’s dominance of Africa, to subsume Asia and Asian Americans under the imperial hegemony of the US. While it may give increased voice to its Asian detective mostly uncovering white crimes, it also contains his work in Western fantasies of Orientalism. Earl Derr Biggers, similar to Edgar Burroughs, invented a new way of seeing Asia as both exemplary and subservient to Western interests. See my discussion of the conflicted race and global mapping in the Chan series and its articulation of an Asian action body, “Yellowface, Minstrelsy, and Hollywood Happy Endings: The Black Camel (1931), Charlie Chan in Egypt (1935) and Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937),”84-103. Delia Malia Konzett. Citation2020. Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity.8 See Ryan Jay Freedman’s Hollywood’s African American Films: The Transition to Sound. Citation2011. This study offers an extensive discussion of studio initiatives to incorporate African American themes and actors in the new sound era. See also Freedman’s “By Herself: Intersectionality, African American Specialty Performers and Eleanor Powell,” in Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity, 122-140. Ed. Delia Malia Konzett. 2020. This chapter illustrates the practice of African American stand-alone specialty performances that could be cut in Southern theaters without any compromise to the film’s narrative.9 Ellen C. Scott, for example, mentions how New York state censors did tone down “one scene of Black-white racial conflict,” (89) namely the noise of white people being strangled by natives in W.S. Van Dyke racial adventure film Trader Horn (1931), preceding his Tarzan the Ape Man (1932). Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era. 2015. No such efforts were made to censor the sounds of natives dying violent deaths in the Tarzan series.10 See Ellen C. Scott’s discussion of Charlotte Crump’s NAACP protest against this film and its blatant violation of OWI guidelines in Cinema Civil Rights, 165.11 The trope of recuperating or reterritorializing white masculinity “in response to the white men’s perceived loss of authority” can still be found in contemporary popular culture according Diane Negra and Yvonne Tasker (Negra and Tasker Citation2019, 111). While inflected with some diversity, recent culinary shows, they claim, tend to be white male centric (e.g. Chef by Jon Favreau or current TV series like Diners or Drive-Ins and Dives) with food truck culture and road trips evoking the white rugged masculinity of the pioneer days.12 See Krin Gabbard’s “Marlon Brando’s Jazz Acting and the Obsolescence of Blackface,”19-50. Black Magic: White Hollywood and African American Culture. Citation2002. Gabbard makes the compelling argument that Brando’s acting style is heavily indebted to the African American hipster of the 1950s. “White Americans,” Gabbard notes, “especially when they are from the working class, base their expression of joy, anger, and sexual desire almost entirely on what they perceive to be the behavior of black Americans” (19). Rocky’s character and his social protest, it can be said, is similarly immersed in and indebted to the Black world of boxing.13 This iconic sequence of Rocky conquering the exclusive space of the art museum is expanded in Rocky III when a bronze statue of the character is unveiled at the same site. Eventually the statue was gifted to the city of Philadelphia and provoked controversy when placed at the museum site. The statue was moved several times and was on display in front of the Spectrum arena. Since 2006, it has been permanently given a space at the bottom of the Philadelphia Museum of Art adjacent to the steps and has become a major tourist attraction and landmark. The history of the statue’s debated location reflects the ambivalent relation of art and social class.14 According to Pamela Robertson, “[the] typical Berkeley number showcases scores of beautiful white women who form intricate, fairly abstract patterns, who do not necessarily dance but walk and smile, and/or are mechanically transported; it kaleidoscopes female form in ever changing cinematic designs” (Hollywood Musicals, 129). To capture this display of a mass ornament, Berkeley frequently used high aerial shots. Judith Mackrell observes, “Berkeley’s overhead shot became his signature device (it was significant perhaps that he’d been an aerial observer with the US air corps)” (The Guardian, Thu 23 March 2017).15 Defining films of this era by Black directors include 12 Years a Slave (2013; Steve McQueen), The Butler (2013; Lee Daniels), Selma (2014; Ava Du Vernay), The Equalizer (2014: Antoine Fuqua), Moonlight (2016; Barry Jenkins), Get Out (2017; Jordan Peele), Mudbound (2017; Dee Rees), BlacKkKlansmen (2018; Spike Lee) and of course Coogler’s own films Fruitvale Station (2013), Creed (2015) and Black Panther (2018). In fact, most of these filmmakers write, produce, and direct their own projects. Powerful Black producers like Shonda Rhimes and Tyler Perry also point to a significant shift in the film and TV industry. Coogler’s Black Panther, which features an all-Black cast and superhero, made history by securing an unprecedented billion-dollar box office profit, having a US Black film go mainstream globally.16 See Chris Holmlund’s Impossible Bodies: Femininity and Masculinity at the Movies (Citation2002) which in its discussion of diverse body images in recent Hollywood reflects a shift towards the intersectional understanding of “impossible” bodies. See also my edited volume Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020) where contributors restore contexts of intersectionality across Hollywood film history.17 In his interview with Variety, Coogler mentions a personal connection to this disability: “My fiancée is a sign language interpreter and her mother has hearing loss. Her younger sister has hearing loss. So it was great to kind of bring awareness to those folks” (Tapley Citation2016, 5).Additional informationNotes on contributorsDelia Malia KonzettDelia Malia Konzett is a Professor of English and Cinema Studies at The University of New Hampshire. She is the author of the monographs Ethnic Modernisms (2002), Hollywood’s Hawaii: Race, Nation, and War (2017) and the editor of Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020).","PeriodicalId":39016,"journal":{"name":"Quarterly Review of Film and Video","volume":"26 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Dysmorphic Masculine Body of Hollywood: Tarzan, Rocky, and Creed\",\"authors\":\"Delia Malia Konzett\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/10509208.2023.2261358\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes1 See Michael Rogin. 1996. Blackface, White Noise: Jewish Immigrants in the Hollywood Melting Pot; Richard Dyer. Citation1997. White; Daniel Bernardi. Citation1996. Ed. Race and the Emergence of U.S. Cinema; Bernardi Citation2001. Ed. Classic Hollywood Classic Whiteness.2 See James Baldwin. Citation1975. The Devil Finds Work; bell hooks.1996. Reel to Real. Race, class and sex at the movies; Cedric J. Robinson. 2007. Forgeries of Memory & Meaning: Blacks & The Regime of Race in American Theater & Film Before World War II; Ellen C. Scott. 2015. Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era3 The Devil Finds Work 1975, 41.4 See Donald Bogle’s extensive study of minstrelsy stereotypes informing the representation of Black characters in Hollywood: Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films.5 See Susan Courtney’s discussion of Jack Johnson’s prize fights and their public reception as well as the ensuing censorship of them in 1912 ending their national dissemination, particularly chapter 2 “The Mixed Birth of ‘Great White’ Masculinity and the Classical Spectator” (Hollywood Fantasies 2004, 30-61).6 Johnny Weissmuller came on the scene as a white swimming miracle, beating the Native Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku, the reigning Olympic champion, at the 1924 summer Olympics in Paris. Kahanamoku, known as the father of modern surfing, had dominated the swimming sport, not unlike Jack Johnson in boxing, since 1912. After ending his swimming career, he also went into the film industry and played minor stereotyped roles, most notably in Wake of the Red Witch (1948), starring as the head of a Polynesian tribe alongside John Wayne. Unlike Weissmuller, he was never given a lead role in line with Hollywood’s racially divided casting practices.7 See my essay “The South Pacific as the Final Frontier: Hollywood’s South Seas Fantasies, the Beachcomber, and Militarization,” 13-25. Cinematic Settlers: The Settler Colonial World in Film. Eds. Janne Lahti and Rebecca Weaver-Hightower. 2020. The beachcomber, as I maintain, is an expression of a civilizational drop-out indulging in a fantasy of South Seas escapism. The 1930s also gives birth to the Charlie Chan series with its attempt, not unlike Tarzan’s dominance of Africa, to subsume Asia and Asian Americans under the imperial hegemony of the US. While it may give increased voice to its Asian detective mostly uncovering white crimes, it also contains his work in Western fantasies of Orientalism. Earl Derr Biggers, similar to Edgar Burroughs, invented a new way of seeing Asia as both exemplary and subservient to Western interests. See my discussion of the conflicted race and global mapping in the Chan series and its articulation of an Asian action body, “Yellowface, Minstrelsy, and Hollywood Happy Endings: The Black Camel (1931), Charlie Chan in Egypt (1935) and Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937),”84-103. Delia Malia Konzett. Citation2020. Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity.8 See Ryan Jay Freedman’s Hollywood’s African American Films: The Transition to Sound. Citation2011. This study offers an extensive discussion of studio initiatives to incorporate African American themes and actors in the new sound era. See also Freedman’s “By Herself: Intersectionality, African American Specialty Performers and Eleanor Powell,” in Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity, 122-140. Ed. Delia Malia Konzett. 2020. This chapter illustrates the practice of African American stand-alone specialty performances that could be cut in Southern theaters without any compromise to the film’s narrative.9 Ellen C. Scott, for example, mentions how New York state censors did tone down “one scene of Black-white racial conflict,” (89) namely the noise of white people being strangled by natives in W.S. Van Dyke racial adventure film Trader Horn (1931), preceding his Tarzan the Ape Man (1932). Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era. 2015. No such efforts were made to censor the sounds of natives dying violent deaths in the Tarzan series.10 See Ellen C. Scott’s discussion of Charlotte Crump’s NAACP protest against this film and its blatant violation of OWI guidelines in Cinema Civil Rights, 165.11 The trope of recuperating or reterritorializing white masculinity “in response to the white men’s perceived loss of authority” can still be found in contemporary popular culture according Diane Negra and Yvonne Tasker (Negra and Tasker Citation2019, 111). While inflected with some diversity, recent culinary shows, they claim, tend to be white male centric (e.g. Chef by Jon Favreau or current TV series like Diners or Drive-Ins and Dives) with food truck culture and road trips evoking the white rugged masculinity of the pioneer days.12 See Krin Gabbard’s “Marlon Brando’s Jazz Acting and the Obsolescence of Blackface,”19-50. Black Magic: White Hollywood and African American Culture. Citation2002. Gabbard makes the compelling argument that Brando’s acting style is heavily indebted to the African American hipster of the 1950s. “White Americans,” Gabbard notes, “especially when they are from the working class, base their expression of joy, anger, and sexual desire almost entirely on what they perceive to be the behavior of black Americans” (19). Rocky’s character and his social protest, it can be said, is similarly immersed in and indebted to the Black world of boxing.13 This iconic sequence of Rocky conquering the exclusive space of the art museum is expanded in Rocky III when a bronze statue of the character is unveiled at the same site. Eventually the statue was gifted to the city of Philadelphia and provoked controversy when placed at the museum site. The statue was moved several times and was on display in front of the Spectrum arena. Since 2006, it has been permanently given a space at the bottom of the Philadelphia Museum of Art adjacent to the steps and has become a major tourist attraction and landmark. The history of the statue’s debated location reflects the ambivalent relation of art and social class.14 According to Pamela Robertson, “[the] typical Berkeley number showcases scores of beautiful white women who form intricate, fairly abstract patterns, who do not necessarily dance but walk and smile, and/or are mechanically transported; it kaleidoscopes female form in ever changing cinematic designs” (Hollywood Musicals, 129). To capture this display of a mass ornament, Berkeley frequently used high aerial shots. Judith Mackrell observes, “Berkeley’s overhead shot became his signature device (it was significant perhaps that he’d been an aerial observer with the US air corps)” (The Guardian, Thu 23 March 2017).15 Defining films of this era by Black directors include 12 Years a Slave (2013; Steve McQueen), The Butler (2013; Lee Daniels), Selma (2014; Ava Du Vernay), The Equalizer (2014: Antoine Fuqua), Moonlight (2016; Barry Jenkins), Get Out (2017; Jordan Peele), Mudbound (2017; Dee Rees), BlacKkKlansmen (2018; Spike Lee) and of course Coogler’s own films Fruitvale Station (2013), Creed (2015) and Black Panther (2018). In fact, most of these filmmakers write, produce, and direct their own projects. Powerful Black producers like Shonda Rhimes and Tyler Perry also point to a significant shift in the film and TV industry. Coogler’s Black Panther, which features an all-Black cast and superhero, made history by securing an unprecedented billion-dollar box office profit, having a US Black film go mainstream globally.16 See Chris Holmlund’s Impossible Bodies: Femininity and Masculinity at the Movies (Citation2002) which in its discussion of diverse body images in recent Hollywood reflects a shift towards the intersectional understanding of “impossible” bodies. See also my edited volume Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020) where contributors restore contexts of intersectionality across Hollywood film history.17 In his interview with Variety, Coogler mentions a personal connection to this disability: “My fiancée is a sign language interpreter and her mother has hearing loss. Her younger sister has hearing loss. So it was great to kind of bring awareness to those folks” (Tapley Citation2016, 5).Additional informationNotes on contributorsDelia Malia KonzettDelia Malia Konzett is a Professor of English and Cinema Studies at The University of New Hampshire. She is the author of the monographs Ethnic Modernisms (2002), Hollywood’s Hawaii: Race, Nation, and War (2017) and the editor of Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020).\",\"PeriodicalId\":39016,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Quarterly Review of Film and Video\",\"volume\":\"26 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-09-28\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Quarterly Review of Film and Video\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/10509208.2023.2261358\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"Arts and Humanities\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Quarterly Review of Film and Video","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/10509208.2023.2261358","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

单击可增大图像大小单击可减小图像大小注1参见Michael Rogin. 1996。黑脸、白噪音:好莱坞大熔炉中的犹太移民理查德·代尔。Citation1997。白色;丹尼尔·贝尔纳迪。Citation1996。编者:种族与美国电影的出现;贝尔纳迪Citation2001。经典好莱坞经典白2见詹姆斯·鲍德温。Citation1975。魔鬼找到工作;贝尔hooks.1996。卷轴到现实。电影中的种族、阶级和性;塞德里克·j·罗宾逊,2007。记忆与意义的伪造:二战前美国戏剧与电影中的黑人与种族制度Ellen C. Scott, 2015。《电影民权:经典好莱坞时代的管制、压制和种族》魔鬼找工作1975年,41.4参见Donald Bogle对好莱坞黑人角色的刻板印象的广泛研究:汤姆、黑人、黑白混血儿、嬷嬷和雄鹿。5参见苏珊·考特尼对杰克·约翰逊的职业拳击赛的讨论,他们的公众接受,以及随后在1912年对他们的审查,结束了他们的全国传播,特别是第二章“‘伟大的白人’男子气概和古典观众的混合诞生”(好莱坞幻想2004年,30-61)约翰尼·韦斯穆勒(Johnny Weissmuller)在1924年巴黎夏季奥运会上击败了当时的奥运冠军、夏威夷土著公爵卡哈纳莫库(Duke Kahanamoku),成为了一个白色游泳奇迹。卡哈纳莫库被称为现代冲浪之父,自1912年以来一直统治着游泳运动,就像杰克·约翰逊(Jack Johnson)统治拳击一样。在结束游泳生涯后,他也进入了电影行业,扮演了一些小角色,最著名的是在1948年的《红女巫的觉醒》(Wake of the Red Witch)中,与约翰·韦恩(John Wayne)一起主演波利尼西亚部落的首领。与韦斯穆勒不同的是,他从来没有出演过主角,这与好莱坞种族分裂的选角惯例是一致的参见我的文章《南太平洋是最后的边疆:好莱坞的南海幻想、海滩流浪汉和军事化》,13-25页。电影移民:电影中的移民殖民世界。Eds。珍妮·拉赫蒂和丽贝卡·韦弗-海托华。2020. 我认为,海滩拾荒者是一种文明落伍者沉迷于南海逃避现实的幻想的表现。20世纪30年代也诞生了陈查理系列,它试图将亚洲和亚裔美国人纳入美国的帝国霸权之下,就像泰山对非洲的统治一样。虽然它可能会给主要揭露白人犯罪的亚洲侦探提供更多的发言权,但它也包含了他在西方东方主义幻想中的作品。厄尔·德尔·比格斯(Earl Derr Biggers)与埃德加·巴勒斯(Edgar Burroughs)相似,发明了一种新的方式,将亚洲视为西方利益的典范和附庸。请看我在《黄脸、吟曲和好莱坞大喜结局:黑骆驼》(1931)、《陈查理在埃及》(1935)和《陈查理在奥运会》(1937)中对成龙系列中种族冲突和全球映射的讨论,以及它对亚洲动作身体的表达。迪莉娅·玛利亚·康泽特。Citation2020。好莱坞在种族和身份的交汇处。8参见瑞恩·杰伊·弗里德曼的《好莱坞的非裔美国人电影:向有声电影的过渡》。Citation2011。本研究提供了一个广泛的讨论工作室倡议,以纳入非裔美国人的主题和演员在新的声音时代。另见弗里德曼的《独自一人:交叉性、非裔美国专业表演者和埃莉诺·鲍威尔》,载于《好莱坞种族与身份的交叉点》,122-140页。迪莉娅·玛利亚·康泽特,2020。这一章说明了非裔美国人独立的特色表演的实践,这些表演可以在南方影院被剪掉,而不会对电影的叙事做出任何妥协例如,艾伦·c·斯科特(Ellen C. Scott)提到,纽约州的审查机构确实淡化了“一个黑白种族冲突的场景”(1989),即W.S.范·戴克(W.S. Van Dyke)的种族冒险电影《商人号角》(Trader Horn, 1931)中白人被当地人勒死的声音,之后是他的《人猿泰山》(Tarzan the Ape Man, 1932)。电影民权:经典好莱坞时代的管制、压制和种族。2015。在《人猿泰山》系列中,当地人暴死时的声音并没有经过这样的审查参见艾伦·c·斯科特在《电影民权》中对夏洛特·克伦普的全国有色人种协进会抗议这部电影及其公然违反OWI指导方针的讨论。根据黛安·内格拉和伊翁·塔斯克(Negra and Tasker Citation2019, 111)的说法,在当代流行文化中,“为了回应白人男性感受到的权威丧失”,恢复或重新界定白人男性气概的修辞仍然可以找到。他们声称,虽然受到了一些多样性的影响,但最近的烹饪节目往往以白人男性为中心(例如乔恩·费儒的《厨师》或当前的电视连续剧《食客》或《汽车餐厅和潜水》),食品卡车文化和公路旅行唤起了拓荒者时代白人粗犷的男子气概。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Dysmorphic Masculine Body of Hollywood: Tarzan, Rocky, and Creed
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes1 See Michael Rogin. 1996. Blackface, White Noise: Jewish Immigrants in the Hollywood Melting Pot; Richard Dyer. Citation1997. White; Daniel Bernardi. Citation1996. Ed. Race and the Emergence of U.S. Cinema; Bernardi Citation2001. Ed. Classic Hollywood Classic Whiteness.2 See James Baldwin. Citation1975. The Devil Finds Work; bell hooks.1996. Reel to Real. Race, class and sex at the movies; Cedric J. Robinson. 2007. Forgeries of Memory & Meaning: Blacks & The Regime of Race in American Theater & Film Before World War II; Ellen C. Scott. 2015. Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era3 The Devil Finds Work 1975, 41.4 See Donald Bogle’s extensive study of minstrelsy stereotypes informing the representation of Black characters in Hollywood: Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films.5 See Susan Courtney’s discussion of Jack Johnson’s prize fights and their public reception as well as the ensuing censorship of them in 1912 ending their national dissemination, particularly chapter 2 “The Mixed Birth of ‘Great White’ Masculinity and the Classical Spectator” (Hollywood Fantasies 2004, 30-61).6 Johnny Weissmuller came on the scene as a white swimming miracle, beating the Native Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku, the reigning Olympic champion, at the 1924 summer Olympics in Paris. Kahanamoku, known as the father of modern surfing, had dominated the swimming sport, not unlike Jack Johnson in boxing, since 1912. After ending his swimming career, he also went into the film industry and played minor stereotyped roles, most notably in Wake of the Red Witch (1948), starring as the head of a Polynesian tribe alongside John Wayne. Unlike Weissmuller, he was never given a lead role in line with Hollywood’s racially divided casting practices.7 See my essay “The South Pacific as the Final Frontier: Hollywood’s South Seas Fantasies, the Beachcomber, and Militarization,” 13-25. Cinematic Settlers: The Settler Colonial World in Film. Eds. Janne Lahti and Rebecca Weaver-Hightower. 2020. The beachcomber, as I maintain, is an expression of a civilizational drop-out indulging in a fantasy of South Seas escapism. The 1930s also gives birth to the Charlie Chan series with its attempt, not unlike Tarzan’s dominance of Africa, to subsume Asia and Asian Americans under the imperial hegemony of the US. While it may give increased voice to its Asian detective mostly uncovering white crimes, it also contains his work in Western fantasies of Orientalism. Earl Derr Biggers, similar to Edgar Burroughs, invented a new way of seeing Asia as both exemplary and subservient to Western interests. See my discussion of the conflicted race and global mapping in the Chan series and its articulation of an Asian action body, “Yellowface, Minstrelsy, and Hollywood Happy Endings: The Black Camel (1931), Charlie Chan in Egypt (1935) and Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937),”84-103. Delia Malia Konzett. Citation2020. Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity.8 See Ryan Jay Freedman’s Hollywood’s African American Films: The Transition to Sound. Citation2011. This study offers an extensive discussion of studio initiatives to incorporate African American themes and actors in the new sound era. See also Freedman’s “By Herself: Intersectionality, African American Specialty Performers and Eleanor Powell,” in Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity, 122-140. Ed. Delia Malia Konzett. 2020. This chapter illustrates the practice of African American stand-alone specialty performances that could be cut in Southern theaters without any compromise to the film’s narrative.9 Ellen C. Scott, for example, mentions how New York state censors did tone down “one scene of Black-white racial conflict,” (89) namely the noise of white people being strangled by natives in W.S. Van Dyke racial adventure film Trader Horn (1931), preceding his Tarzan the Ape Man (1932). Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era. 2015. No such efforts were made to censor the sounds of natives dying violent deaths in the Tarzan series.10 See Ellen C. Scott’s discussion of Charlotte Crump’s NAACP protest against this film and its blatant violation of OWI guidelines in Cinema Civil Rights, 165.11 The trope of recuperating or reterritorializing white masculinity “in response to the white men’s perceived loss of authority” can still be found in contemporary popular culture according Diane Negra and Yvonne Tasker (Negra and Tasker Citation2019, 111). While inflected with some diversity, recent culinary shows, they claim, tend to be white male centric (e.g. Chef by Jon Favreau or current TV series like Diners or Drive-Ins and Dives) with food truck culture and road trips evoking the white rugged masculinity of the pioneer days.12 See Krin Gabbard’s “Marlon Brando’s Jazz Acting and the Obsolescence of Blackface,”19-50. Black Magic: White Hollywood and African American Culture. Citation2002. Gabbard makes the compelling argument that Brando’s acting style is heavily indebted to the African American hipster of the 1950s. “White Americans,” Gabbard notes, “especially when they are from the working class, base their expression of joy, anger, and sexual desire almost entirely on what they perceive to be the behavior of black Americans” (19). Rocky’s character and his social protest, it can be said, is similarly immersed in and indebted to the Black world of boxing.13 This iconic sequence of Rocky conquering the exclusive space of the art museum is expanded in Rocky III when a bronze statue of the character is unveiled at the same site. Eventually the statue was gifted to the city of Philadelphia and provoked controversy when placed at the museum site. The statue was moved several times and was on display in front of the Spectrum arena. Since 2006, it has been permanently given a space at the bottom of the Philadelphia Museum of Art adjacent to the steps and has become a major tourist attraction and landmark. The history of the statue’s debated location reflects the ambivalent relation of art and social class.14 According to Pamela Robertson, “[the] typical Berkeley number showcases scores of beautiful white women who form intricate, fairly abstract patterns, who do not necessarily dance but walk and smile, and/or are mechanically transported; it kaleidoscopes female form in ever changing cinematic designs” (Hollywood Musicals, 129). To capture this display of a mass ornament, Berkeley frequently used high aerial shots. Judith Mackrell observes, “Berkeley’s overhead shot became his signature device (it was significant perhaps that he’d been an aerial observer with the US air corps)” (The Guardian, Thu 23 March 2017).15 Defining films of this era by Black directors include 12 Years a Slave (2013; Steve McQueen), The Butler (2013; Lee Daniels), Selma (2014; Ava Du Vernay), The Equalizer (2014: Antoine Fuqua), Moonlight (2016; Barry Jenkins), Get Out (2017; Jordan Peele), Mudbound (2017; Dee Rees), BlacKkKlansmen (2018; Spike Lee) and of course Coogler’s own films Fruitvale Station (2013), Creed (2015) and Black Panther (2018). In fact, most of these filmmakers write, produce, and direct their own projects. Powerful Black producers like Shonda Rhimes and Tyler Perry also point to a significant shift in the film and TV industry. Coogler’s Black Panther, which features an all-Black cast and superhero, made history by securing an unprecedented billion-dollar box office profit, having a US Black film go mainstream globally.16 See Chris Holmlund’s Impossible Bodies: Femininity and Masculinity at the Movies (Citation2002) which in its discussion of diverse body images in recent Hollywood reflects a shift towards the intersectional understanding of “impossible” bodies. See also my edited volume Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020) where contributors restore contexts of intersectionality across Hollywood film history.17 In his interview with Variety, Coogler mentions a personal connection to this disability: “My fiancée is a sign language interpreter and her mother has hearing loss. Her younger sister has hearing loss. So it was great to kind of bring awareness to those folks” (Tapley Citation2016, 5).Additional informationNotes on contributorsDelia Malia KonzettDelia Malia Konzett is a Professor of English and Cinema Studies at The University of New Hampshire. She is the author of the monographs Ethnic Modernisms (2002), Hollywood’s Hawaii: Race, Nation, and War (2017) and the editor of Hollywood at the Intersection of Race and Identity (2020).
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来源期刊
Quarterly Review of Film and Video
Quarterly Review of Film and Video Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
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