Eleven Bruce Lee I Love You: Discourses of Race and Masculinity in the Queer Superstardom of JJ Chinois

2020 ◽  
pp. 271-304
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Célia Tolentino ◽  
Luana Hordones Chaves
Keyword(s):  

Neste artigo analisamos a obra Persépolis, longa metragem de animação que sintetiza os quatro volumes da obra homônima lançada na forma de história em quadrinhos na França, entre os anos de 2000 e 2003. Narrado pela autora Marjane Satrapi, conta os quinze anos sucessivos aos acontecimentos de 1979 no Irã, a partir de sua perspectiva pessoal. Pertencente a um grupo social de esquerda e ocidentalizado segundo o padrão iraniano, viu morrer as utopias deste segmento com a vitória da Revolução Islâmica. No entanto, num autoexílio em Viena, em plena adolescência, percebeu que a apregoada liberdade ocidental também cobrava o seu preço. Tomando a narrativa de Persépolis como um olhar literalmente em perspectiva, colocamos em debate aspectos políticos e sociais da relação Oriente/Ocidente, dialogando, particularmente, com a obra de Edward Said.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-82
Author(s):  
Gabriel F. Y. Tsang

Masculinity, in Lacan’s sense, is an imagination. To specifically theorise Chinese masculinity, Kam Louie examined the elements of wen (cultural attainment) and wu (martial valour) rendered through historical or artistic images, and Song Geng and Derek Hird guide the discussions about Chinese manhood represented in everyday life. With a Marxist perspective, Lo Kwai Cheung illustrated the dissolvability of Chinese masculinity under international capitalism. With reference to Aristotle, it is supposed that Chinese masculinity, similar to ‘tragicity’ in nature, can be represented through imitating actions and hence be perceived. Based on Aristotle’s understanding, we can regard actions as ‘iterable’ media (like Derrida’s understanding of written texts) which engender performances according to the genealogy of quantitative mimesis. Integrating theoretical discussions with a chronological approach, my full paper will go through following points in order to summarise the changes in Hong Kong crime films from the post-Bruce Lee era to the 2000s: (1) Hong Kong crime film inherited the martial side of masculinity from action films and became a popular genre since A Better Tomorrow was well received in the mid-1980s. (2) Many directors diversified the interpretation of crime in the late 1980s and the 1990s, but remained a focus on the strength, nimbleness and boldness of men. (3) After the decline of Hong Kong film industry for several years, Infernal Affairs’s success renewed the representation of manhood. (4) From the 2000s to now, male characters in crime films are preferably intelligent and wisely-romantic, like the fragile scholar in ancient China. (5) While globalisation seems to be eliminating the Chineseness of Chinese masculinity, I argue that geographical specificity and different speed of cultural development lead to the impossibility of synchronic masculine similarity. (6) Through a brief discussion concerning Hollywood’s adaptation of Hong Kong films, I argue that local masculinity is not transformable.  


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