重新定义殖民地:对瓦坎达和思辨小说的非洲主义分析

IF 0.6 Q4 REGIONAL & URBAN PLANNING
Ricardo A Guthrie
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引用次数: 4

摘要

正如电影《黑豹》(2018)中所描绘的那样,瓦坎达的世界为观众提供了一个机会,让他们沉浸在一个近乎奇幻的非洲世界的辉煌场景、英雄戏剧、黑人女权主义力量和狡诈中。渴望寻求黑人电影文化的观众热切地选择了瓦坎丹幻想——这是基于这位电影制作人为黑人观众和漫画迷建立了一个富有想象力和吸引力的愿景的辉煌成就。享受《黑豹》是一种巨大的解脱,即使它对一个反英雄的残暴冲突的错误愿景,他分享瓦坎丹技术以拯救散居海外的非洲人的理由是有道理的,尽管他对战争般解决方案的暴力要求并没有。将一名白人中情局特工塑造成英雄,或者将联合国描绘成和平揭露瓦坎达的平台,这也是一条不幸的情节线。但这些都是电影所呈现的主要概念框架和困境的次要问题:如果一个现代非洲国家不是通过殖民主义创建的,它会是什么样子?非洲本土艺术、文化、语言、音乐和电影摄影能否为设想一个既不是乌托邦也不是反乌托邦的“瓦坎丹”世界奠定基础?我们如何重新定义存在于殖民、新殖民和后殖民想象之外的非洲双孢子虫的可能性?在解决这些问题的同时,我们不应该贬低《黑豹》在全球电影方面的成就,而应该寻求运用非洲主义者的分析来狭隘地审视两个问题:一个未受殖民主义影响的非洲世界的想象领域如何肯定黑人的天才和未来性,使当代人能够取消对自己的编程,打击反黑人种族主义?而且,在当前的民族国家和社区中,黑人思辨小说如何在瓦坎达之外重新塑造一个去殖民的空间,在这些地方,非洲流散的人民每天都在为生计、权力和欢乐而斗争?使用Eshun(2003)、Anderson和Jones(2015)、Mudimbe(1988)等理论家以及Inayatullah(2008)、Sardar(2009)和Gatune(20102011)等未来主义者提供的一系列复杂的非洲主义和全球泛非主义分析,本文探讨了瓦坎达是如何在殖民空间中存在的,以及黑人推理小说(以及《黑豹》电影本身)是如何依赖于去殖民的想象力来维持和易读的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Redefining the colonial: An Afrofuturist analysis of Wakanda and speculative fiction
The world of Wakanda, as depicted in the film Black Panther (2018), provided an opportunity for viewers to bask in the glorious scenes, heroic drama, Black feminist power, and guile of an African world bordering on the fantastic. Starving audiences seeking Black filmic culture eagerly settled for Wakandan fantasy - based on the filmmaker’s magnificent achievement to build a fanciful and engaging vision for Black viewers and comic-book aficionados alike. It was a significant relief to enjoy Black Panther, even with its errant vision of thuggish conflict by an anti-hero whose rationale for sharing Wakandan technology to save Africans in the diaspora made sense - though his violent demand for war-like resolution did not. It was also an unfortunate plot line to make a white CIA agent a hero, or to depict the United Nations as the platform for peacefully bringing Wakanda to light. But these are side issues to the main conceptual framework, and dilemma, presented by the film: What does a modern African nation look like, if it has not been created though colonialism? Can African-Diasporic art, culture, language, music and cinematography provide a foundation for envisioning a “Wakandan” world that is neither utopic nor dystopic? How do we redefine Afro-Diasporic possibility, existing outside of colonial, neocolonial and postcolonial imaginations? While addressing such issues, we should not belittle Black Panther’s global cinematic accomplishment, but instead seek to deploy Afrofuturist analytics to narrowly examine two questions: How does an imaginary realm of the African world - untouched by colonialism - affirm Black genius and futurity to enable current generations to de-program ourselves and combat anti-Black racism? And, how can Black speculative fiction re-fashion a de-colonial space beyond Wakanda, in the current nation-states and community places within which Afro-diasporic peoples struggle daily for sustenance, power, and joy? Using the complex array of Afrofuturist and global Pan-Africanist analyses provided by theorists such as Eshun (2003), Anderson and Jones (2015), Mudimbe (1988), and futurists such as Inayatullah (2008), Sardar (2009), and Gatune (2010, 2011), this essay examines how Wakanda exists within colonial spaces and how Black speculative fiction (as well as the Black Panther film itself) depend upon a de-colonial imagination for sustenance and legibility.
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来源期刊
Journal of Futures Studies
Journal of Futures Studies REGIONAL & URBAN PLANNING-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Futures Studies is a globally-oriented, trans-disciplinary referred journal. Its mission is to develop high-quality, futures-oriented research and thinking based on the evolving knowledge base of Futures Studies. Articles accepted for publication are expected to show an in-depth understanding of the field"s dimensions, content, research perspectives and methods.
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