遥远星系中的残疾:恶棍神话、“痴迷的复仇者联盟”和星球大战中的复杂化身

Elisa Shaholli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了奇幻系列电影《星球大战》中对残疾的刻画。幻想作为一种类型,能够通过富有远见的形式重新呈现我们过去和现在的价值观,并可以作为创造形象的社会的一面镜子。幻想是强大的,因为它使电影能够在其图像和主题中概念化现实观点和当今文化。就残疾研究而言,幻想在分析残疾表征方面发挥着关键作用,因为幻想以利用残疾并将其转化为莎伦·L·斯奈德和大卫·T·米切尔的“叙事假肢”而闻名。一旦转化,残疾就被用于其表征力,而不是其真实性质。利用罗兰·巴特(Roland Barthes)对神话制作的研究和马丁·F·诺登(Martin F.Norden)建立的残疾原型,我讨论了残疾在充满残疾的系列《星球大战》中的不同刻画。我讨论了残疾形象是如何依赖原型的,比如诺登的《痴迷的复仇者》,残疾的神话形成与邪恶的滑动尺度有关,以及与技术对人类的非人化影响有关的主题的象征性联系。然而,我也讨论了独立的《星球大战》电影《侠盗一号》,该片通过探索托宾·西伯斯的复杂化身理论,在刻画上有所不同。这些电影可以作为当今残疾电影的一个更大的隐喻:在改善残疾表现方面采取了措施,但仍然表现为长期存在的刻板印象和原型的肇事者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disability in a Galaxy Far, Far Away: A Mythology of Villains, "Obsessive Avengers," and Complex Embodiments in Star Wars
This article analyzes the depictions disability embodies in the fantasy film series Star Wars. Fantasy as a genre is able to re-present our past and present values through visionary forms and can act as a mirror to the society that creates the image. Fantasy is powerful as it enables films the ability to conceptualize realistic viewpoints and current day culture in their images and themes. In terms of Disability Studies, fantasy plays a critical role in the analysis of disability representation since fantasy is known for exploiting and transforming disabilities into Sharon L. Snyder and David T. Mitchell's "narrative prostheses." Once transformed, disability is used for its representational power rather than its true nature. Utilizing Roland Barthes's research on myth-making and Martin F. Norden's established disability archetypes, I discuss the varying portrayals disabilities have throughout the disability-laden series Star Wars. I discuss how disability portrayals rely on archetypes such as Norden's "Obsessive Avenger," the myth formation of disability as related to a sliding scale for evil, and as a symbolic connection to themes pertaining to technology's dehumanizing effects on humans. However, I also discuss the standalone Star Wars film Rogue One which diverges in portrayals through its exploration of Tobin Siebers's theory of complex embodiment. These films can act as a larger metaphor for films with disabilities today: taking steps when it comes to the improvement of disability representations, yet still behaving as perpetrators of long-held stereotypes and archetypes.  
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