O代表东方主义:洛朗·坎泰的《南方之旅》(Vers le sud/ going South, 2005)中性游客凝视的动态

Q2 Arts and Humanities
C. Hammond, Andrew McGregor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了洛朗·坎泰(Laurent Cantet)的《南方之旅》(Vers le sud/Heading South)(2005)中南北性旅游的东方主义动态。影片的叙事围绕着三个中产阶级中年白人西方女性的自我利益动机展开,她们在20世纪70年代末从北美前往海地,在她们认为是岛屿天堂的地方探索她们的性取向,有效地将自己从祖国对她们的刻板社会行为中解脱出来。这些女人利用年轻的海地黑人男人提供的快乐,通常是为了换取金钱或物品,并点燃了与当地主人浪漫爱情的片面幻想,似乎无视这种社会和经济力量不平衡的东方主义本质。本文探讨1970年代末海地在杜瓦利埃政权统治下的政治镇压和暴力的历史背景,以及影片中所表现的空间政治。影片以海地为背景,为西方/北方观众展现了一个相对陌生的文化和社会环境,导演敏锐地意识到主题的异国情调,以及影片不可能在与东方/南方有问题的接触中保持中立。这篇文章认为,电影主角的特权地位不仅与坎泰的导演眼光相匹配,而且与文章作者等后殖民学者的智力超然相匹配,他们承认,他们对主题的参与可能会重演他们试图揭露的东方主义动态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
O is for Orientalism: the dynamics of the sexual tourist gaze in Laurent Cantet’s Vers le sud/Heading South (2005)
This article explores the Orientalist dynamics of North/South sexual tourism in Laurent Cantet’s Vers le sud/Heading South (2005). The narrative of the film is structured around the self-interested motivations of three white middle-aged bourgeois Western women who travel from North America to Haiti in the late 1970s in order to explore their sexuality in what they perceive as an island paradise, effectively exiling themselves from the codified social behaviour expected of them in their homeland. The women avail themselves of the pleasures offered by young black Haitian men, often in exchange for money or goods, and fuel one-sided fantasies of romantic love with their local hosts, seemingly oblivious to the Orientalist nature of such an imbalance of social and economic power. The article explores the historical context of the political repression and violence of late-1970s Haiti under the Duvalier regime, as well as the manifestations of spatial politics represented in the film. In its Haitian setting, Vers le sud sheds light on a relatively unfamiliar cultural and social milieu for the Western/Northern audience, with the director keenly aware of the exoticism of the subject matter and the impossibility of the film to maintain its neutrality in a problematic engagement with the Orient/South. The article argues that the privileged position of the film’s protagonists is matched not only by Cantet’s directorial gaze, but also by the intellectual detachment of postcolonial scholars such as the article’s authors, who acknowledge that their engagement with the subject matter risks re-enacting the Orientalist dynamics they seek to expose.
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来源期刊
Contemporary French Civilization
Contemporary French Civilization Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.30
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23
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