Show Us as We Are : Place, Nation and Identity in Jamaican Film

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Show Us as We Are : Place, Nation and Identity in Jamaican Film

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 277 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789766407179
  • DDC分類 791.4372

Full Description

Faced with the challenges that inevitably occur in small markets, feature film production in Jamaica has been sporadic and uneven, yet local filmmakers have succeeded in creating a small but exciting body of work that is receiving increasing attention. Organized as a series of discussions on a selection of the more well-known Jamaican films, this study employs close readings of these texts to reveal their complexity, sophistication and artistry. The focus on the politics of identity and representation, examined through the lens of place and nation, opens up a conversation on how these films have contributed to, and participate in, the discourse on Jamaican identity. Place is understood as both constituting and reflecting identity, and is explored within the context of the films' representation of the postcolonial city, the dancehall, the north coast hotel and the great house. The concern with nation is revealed as a persistent and underlying focus that more often than not, directs our attention to the grievous gap between rich and poor in Jamaican society. These films' often-criticized attention to marginalized communities plagued by problems of crime and violence can be understood, Moseley-Wood argues, as an expression of the postcolonial struggle to redefine place in ways that contest hegemonic discourses that define Jamaica as hedonistic paradise as well as challenge the unifying and homogenizing myths and narratives of nation.

Contents

Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: Show Us as We Are
Imagined Bonds in the New Nation: The 1962 Independence Films
"Badda Dan Dead": Resistance and Intertextuality in The Harder They Come
The Trickster as Cocksman: The Hotel as Contact Zone in Smile Orange
Reggae and Rockers: Privileging the Local, Disrupting Paradigms of the External Gaze
Love and Sex in Babylon: Nation and Desire in Children of Babylon and One Love
Negotiating Patriarchy: The Erotic Performance of Dancehall Queen
Real/Reel Life in Jungle: Alienated Spaces in Third World Cop and Ghett'a Life
Dreaming History and the Nightmare World of Jamaican Politics in Better Mus' Come
Epilogue: Expanding Narratives of Identity in Jamaican Film
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

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