Sprache im Film / Language in Film
Igel (Verlag)
978-3-86815-741-3 (ISBN)
Markus Pohlmeyer: Dichter, Essayist und Autor bei CulturMag/CrimeMag, lehrt an der Europa Universität-Flensburg Katholische Theologie und im Studiengang Kultur-Sprache-Medien.
Janice Jake is Chair of the English Department at Midlands Technical College in Columbia, SC. Her research interests lie in language contact, especially codeswitching. Dr. Jake’s research focuses on extending the principles of the Matrix Language Frame Model (Myers-Scotton, Duelling Languages, 1993) and the 4-M Model of morpheme classification (Jake and Myers-Scotton, “The 4-M model: Different routes in production for different morphemes,” Adamou and Matras, eds., in press) to other contact phenomena, such as language acquisition (Jake, “Constructing Interlanguage,” Linguistics 36(2), 1998), pidgin and creole linguistics, and the intersection of socio- and psycholinguistics in contact phenomena (Myers-Scotton and Jake, “Cross-linguistic asymmetries in code-switching patterns: implications for bilingual language production,” 2015, in Schwieter, ed.).
Textprobe: The Hero's Journey: Wakandan Myth and Black Panther Black Panther, the highest grossing film of 2018, is history making in many ways. It is the first superhero film nominated for Best Picture Oscar. It was released at a time when Black Americans, and people of African descent in general, still struggle as they speak out against centuries of rights denied and at a time when a sitting president of an industrialized nation insults an entire continent (Kendi, 2019). However, the superhero is not the only fully-formed character in the film. The women of Wakanda, the fictional nation where Vibranium powers technology and research, rescue their leader, the Black Panther, and their country, with their brains, their brawn, and their loyalty to Wakanda. The warriors of Wakanda, including the self-isolating Jabaris, eventually realize they must unite in order to prevent the riches of Wakanda from being used in a zero-sum struggle to overturn centuries of oppression via military might in one violent grab for power. Even the perspective of the anti-hero, Erik Killmonger, reveals a logic and humanity underlying his drive and striking absence of empathy. Racial injustice and violence in America, combined with Wakandan isolationism, fuels Killmonger's rage at his early personal loss and damaged view of global power and race. The transition from comic book to big screen presents a successful transformation of Wakanda itself. By the end of the film, Wakanda faces its legacy and its debt to the world and sheds its self-serving and hypocritical pretense of third world nation. Wakanda comes of age in a world of risk, but a world where integrity and honesty can better serve the world's struggling people, where great inequalities exist in first-world and third-world nations. Black Panther is timely, tackling race and gender at a time of global "wokeness." It is full of heroic actions, superhero powers, and science fantasy technology. The music, the visuals, and the action sequences carry the audience along. The acting seamlessly presents believable characters who might have turned cartoonish or indulgent. Instead, they shine (Travers, 2018). They are all multidimensional and thinking, reflecting, interacting beings. The audience is transported to a world more real than the black mirror. It adores its warriors, admires its king, and even weeps for the villain. Much has already been written about this epic film, in which superhero action adventure becomes art: It is recognized for evoking a "haunting emotional response" (Henderson, 2018), for its political timeliness, and for breaking the "binary" on good and evil, on gender-roles, and on race (Dargis, 2018). Afrofuturism becomes real; Wakanda is what might have happened if Western Civilization had not built its wealth on slavery. While the "El Dorado" of Vibranium-rich Wakanda is unrealistic, many aspects of multi-cultural techno-driven Wakanda are not. This is one factor that draws viewers into Black Panther, not the power of the herb-transformed king, nor the super-charged action sequences or car chases. Why does the Afrofuturistic world of Wakanda speak so deeply to its audience? Authenticity. While the film adheres to many superhero Hollywood conventions, it presents a culture with its origin story intact and in which the hero's journey is real (Campbell, 2008; Donat, 2003). While not perfect, Wakanda seems real. Its authenticity comes from many sources. Clearly, the careful casting, the award-winning production and costume design ("Black Panther Awards," 2019; Watercutter, 2019) and the inclusive and forward-looking music score (Burlingame, 2018; Pearce, 2018) play a role. Two features of Black Panther that contribute to this authenticity are myth and language. The film has a double opening, one myth and another, a hard reality. First, a Wakandan child, presumably T'Challa, the future Black Panther, asks his Baba about his people. The discovery of the powers of Vibranium, and the
| Erscheinungsdatum | 20.10.2020 |
|---|---|
| Reihe/Serie | Flensburger Studien zu Literatur und Theologie ; 19 |
| Co-Autor | Elin Fredsted, Alexander Jöckel, Bruce Martin, Marie Hartkopf, Shiva Leicht |
| Sprache | englisch; deutsch |
| Maße | 138 x 203 mm |
| Einbandart | Paperback |
| Themenwelt | Kunst / Musik / Theater ► Film / TV |
| Geisteswissenschaften ► Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft ► Literaturwissenschaft | |
| Schlagworte | Black Panther • Der Report der Magd • Die Wege des Herren • Game of Thrones • Littlefinger • Science Fiction • Starship Troopers • The Handmaid's Tale • The Handmaid’s Tale • TV-Serie • Tyrion Lannister |
| ISBN-10 | 3-86815-741-7 / 3868157417 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-3-86815-741-3 / 9783868157413 |
| Zustand | Neuware |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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