Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner

The urban future of Los Angeles in Ridley Scott’s film Blade Runner (1982) is one of advanced decay, an sf-noir vision of a postwar metropolis in decline. While the city falls into profound disrepair and its citizens succumb to debilitating sicknesses, however, the furor over fugitive replicants con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robert Yeates
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université de Limoges 2021-06-01
Series:ReS Futurae : Revue d'Études sur la Science-fiction
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/resf/9308
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spelling doaj-5967112e02cb425d9f656155fbb469ec2021-07-08T16:31:21ZfraUniversité de LimogesReS Futurae : Revue d'Études sur la Science-fiction2264-69492021-06-011710.4000/resf.9308Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade RunnerRobert YeatesThe urban future of Los Angeles in Ridley Scott’s film Blade Runner (1982) is one of advanced decay, an sf-noir vision of a postwar metropolis in decline. While the city falls into profound disrepair and its citizens succumb to debilitating sicknesses, however, the furor over fugitive replicants consumes the attentions of the authorities and the blade runner protagonists. The film and the 1997 video game based upon it take a novel set in San Francisco, the home of some of the first gay neighborhoods in the US that suffered from the crackdowns of the late 1970s and 1980s, and transplants this to Los Angeles, a city which glamorized decay, adding an aesthetic that draws on the look of New York, a city notoriously in economic decline in the 1970s. The plight of specials, replicants, and blade runners in the Blade Runner universe reflects the context of a culture fixated on the policing of arbitrary dividing lines separating what is designated sexually deviant or undesirable in American cities at the time.http://journals.openedition.org/resf/9308Blade RunnerScott (Ridley)urban decaygender
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Yeates
spellingShingle Robert Yeates
Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
ReS Futurae : Revue d'Études sur la Science-fiction
Blade Runner
Scott (Ridley)
urban decay
gender
author_facet Robert Yeates
author_sort Robert Yeates
title Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
title_short Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
title_full Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
title_fullStr Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
title_full_unstemmed Décadence urbaine et Hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de Blade Runner
title_sort décadence urbaine et hors-la-loi sexuels dans l’univers de blade runner
publisher Université de Limoges
series ReS Futurae : Revue d'Études sur la Science-fiction
issn 2264-6949
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The urban future of Los Angeles in Ridley Scott’s film Blade Runner (1982) is one of advanced decay, an sf-noir vision of a postwar metropolis in decline. While the city falls into profound disrepair and its citizens succumb to debilitating sicknesses, however, the furor over fugitive replicants consumes the attentions of the authorities and the blade runner protagonists. The film and the 1997 video game based upon it take a novel set in San Francisco, the home of some of the first gay neighborhoods in the US that suffered from the crackdowns of the late 1970s and 1980s, and transplants this to Los Angeles, a city which glamorized decay, adding an aesthetic that draws on the look of New York, a city notoriously in economic decline in the 1970s. The plight of specials, replicants, and blade runners in the Blade Runner universe reflects the context of a culture fixated on the policing of arbitrary dividing lines separating what is designated sexually deviant or undesirable in American cities at the time.
topic Blade Runner
Scott (Ridley)
urban decay
gender
url http://journals.openedition.org/resf/9308
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