Article
Details
Citation
Fleming D (2020) Race and World memory in Arrival. Science Fiction Film and Television, 13 (2), p. 247¨C267. https://doi.org/10.3828/sfftv.2020.13
Abstract
Drawing inspiration from Benjamin¡¯s analysis of the small ¡®crystals of the total event,¡¯ and Barthes notion of imagistic punctum, this essay examines an irritating ¡®cinematic splinter¡¯ derived from Arrival (Villeneuve US/Canada 2016). The grating key scene witnesses the film¡¯s only significant African-American character, Colonel Weber (Forest Whitaker), remind the white linguistic professor, Louise Banks (Amy Adams), that ¡®a more advance race nearly wiped out the [Australian Aborigines].¡¯ Exploring this excruciating spec helps to explode a kaleidoscopic image of our epoch, within which we can perceive a contracted ¡®montage of history¡¯¡ªthat counterbalances the sf story¡¯s teleological projection of future. Among other things, the Manichean scene foregrounds how¡ªas has historically been the case with Hollywood fare¡ªperceptions of past and future become negotiated through a shifting web of racial and ethnic hierarchies. Recognising this, the essay explores how the scene¡¯s contrived mise-en-scene amplifies Banks/Adams¡¯ otherwise ¡®invisible¡¯ white profile, while using Weber/Whitaker to enfold divergent Black histories associated with past colonial contacts. This in turn helps conger images of a more complex and contested global history, or what Deleuze calls a ¡®world-memory,¡¯ that forces us to consider the real-world context of the here-and-now, wherein China appears on the ascendance.
Journal
Science Fiction Film and Television: Volume 13, Issue 2
Status | Published |
---|---|
Publication date | 31/07/2020 |
Publication date online | 01/07/2020 |
Date accepted by journal | 26/07/2019 |
URL | |
ISSN | 1754-3770 |
eISSN | 1754-3789 |
People (1)
Senior Lecturer, Communications, Media and Culture