Spain, Reincarnated: Julio Medem's Caótica Ana and New Spanish Media(tion) in the World
Spanish director Julio Medems visually stunning yet controversial 2007 film Chaotic Ana was panned for its ostensibly Manichaean treatment of gender relations and its crudely scatological ending, both of which have distracted attention from the works fascinating incursions into global politics. Wh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature 2009-06, Vol.33 (2), p.296 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Spanish director Julio Medems visually stunning yet controversial 2007 film Chaotic Ana was panned for its ostensibly Manichaean treatment of gender relations and its crudely scatological ending, both of which have distracted attention from the works fascinating incursions into global politics. While the films complex layering of hawk and dove imagery figures centuries of male violence against women, it is also imbricated with an extended meditation on the divergent roles of the United States and Spain on the contemporary world stage. Through the male protagonist Said, a Saharawi painter, the film artfully shifts postcolonial guilt for the fate of the Western Sahara from the former colonizer Spain to the United States. Even as the film obfuscates Spains multifaceted imperial past, it engages in a withering indictment of U.S. foreign policy in the post-9/11 era, indicating through a web of symbolic references to the Statue of Liberty that Americans have turned away from their once-vaunted mission. That mission, the film (problematically) suggests, must now be taken up by Spain, which, together with other enlightened European nations, serves as a beacon for global justice, drawing upon the Spanish National Courts declaration of universal jurisdiction to prosecute the U.S. governments neocolonial crimes against humanity. |
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ISSN: | 2334-4415 1555-7839 2334-4415 |
DOI: | 10.4148/2334-4415.1703 |