Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood

In this post September 11 (9/11) climate of the “War on Terror”, Hollywood political-thriller films carry a new cultural currency. Drawing from literature in postcolonial studies and its engagement with representations in popular culture, this paper analyzes the film The Kingdom (2007)—a fictional p...

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Main Author: Michelle Aguayo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Saint Paul University 2009-01-01
Series:Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/0902/v2i2_aguayo.pdf
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spelling doaj-e6a1a75c0c4c40a09c3220b87ee65eb02020-12-02T04:01:00ZengSaint Paul UniversityGlobal Media Journal: Canadian Edition1918-59012009-01-01224156Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood Michelle AguayoIn this post September 11 (9/11) climate of the “War on Terror”, Hollywood political-thriller films carry a new cultural currency. Drawing from literature in postcolonial studies and its engagement with representations in popular culture, this paper analyzes the film The Kingdom (2007)—a fictional political-thriller with a storyline inspired by real terrorist bombings in Saudi Arabia. This paper critiques and notes the film’s narrative practices, with particular attention paid to the racial and gendered discourses produced in it. In examining the representational codes and politics in the film’s construction of Muslim bodies post-9/11, it is argued here that a critical engagement with Hollywood cinema is necessary in order to reveal the complex ways in which Muslim bodies are scripted as dangerous, pre-modern and uncivilized in American popular culture. This analysis will expose how representations of Muslims in Hollywood not only are essentialized, but act simultaneously to discipline these bodies, which is grounded in the trope of the “War on Terror”, intimately linking it to the project of empire. A commitment to deconstructing Muslim bodies in Hollywood will illustrate the embeddedness of racialized and gendered imaginings of “Others” as they unfold not only “on-screen”, but also their relationship to violent colonial projects “off-screen”. http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/0902/v2i2_aguayo.pdfRaceGenderRepresentationsWar on TerrorHollywoodMuslimsIslamEmpireThe KingdomSeptember 11
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Aguayo
spellingShingle Michelle Aguayo
Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Race
Gender
Representations
War on Terror
Hollywood
Muslims
Islam
Empire
The Kingdom
September 11
author_facet Michelle Aguayo
author_sort Michelle Aguayo
title Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
title_short Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
title_full Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
title_fullStr Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
title_full_unstemmed Representations of Muslim Bodies in The Kingdom: Deconstructing Discourses in Hollywood
title_sort representations of muslim bodies in the kingdom: deconstructing discourses in hollywood
publisher Saint Paul University
series Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
issn 1918-5901
publishDate 2009-01-01
description In this post September 11 (9/11) climate of the “War on Terror”, Hollywood political-thriller films carry a new cultural currency. Drawing from literature in postcolonial studies and its engagement with representations in popular culture, this paper analyzes the film The Kingdom (2007)—a fictional political-thriller with a storyline inspired by real terrorist bombings in Saudi Arabia. This paper critiques and notes the film’s narrative practices, with particular attention paid to the racial and gendered discourses produced in it. In examining the representational codes and politics in the film’s construction of Muslim bodies post-9/11, it is argued here that a critical engagement with Hollywood cinema is necessary in order to reveal the complex ways in which Muslim bodies are scripted as dangerous, pre-modern and uncivilized in American popular culture. This analysis will expose how representations of Muslims in Hollywood not only are essentialized, but act simultaneously to discipline these bodies, which is grounded in the trope of the “War on Terror”, intimately linking it to the project of empire. A commitment to deconstructing Muslim bodies in Hollywood will illustrate the embeddedness of racialized and gendered imaginings of “Others” as they unfold not only “on-screen”, but also their relationship to violent colonial projects “off-screen”.
topic Race
Gender
Representations
War on Terror
Hollywood
Muslims
Islam
Empire
The Kingdom
September 11
url http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/0902/v2i2_aguayo.pdf
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