0. Introduction: A Southern State of Exception Oliver C. Speck, Virginia Commonwealth University, USA Part I. Cultural Roots and Intertexts: Germany, France, US 20 1. Dr. 'King' Schultz as Ideologue and Emblem: The German Enlightenment and the Legacy of the 1848 Revolutions in Django Unchained Robert von Dassanowsky, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, USA 2. Franco-faux-ne : Django's jive Margaret Ozierski, Virginia Commonwealth University, USA 3. Of Handshakes and Dragons: Django's German Cousins Dana Weber, Florida State University, USA 4. Django and Lincoln: The Suffering Slave and the Law of Slavery Gregory L. Kaster, Gustavus Adolphus College, USA Part II. Philosophy Unchained: Ethics, Body Space and Evil 5. Bodies in and out of Place: Django Unchained and Body-Spaces Alexander D. Ornella, University of Hull, UK 6. The “D” is Silent, but Human Rights Are Not: Django Unchained as Human Rights Discourse Kate E. Temoney, Florida State University, USA 7. Hark, Hark, the (dis)Enchanted Kantian Or: Tarantino's 'Evil' and its Anti-Cathartic Resonance Dara Waldron, Limerick Institute of Technology, UK 8. Value and Violence in Django Unchained William Brown, University of Roehampton, UK Part III. Questions of Race and Representation: What is a "Black Film"? 9. "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Film": "What does it mean to be a black film in twenty-first century America?" Heather Ashley Hayes, Whitman College, USA, and Gilbert B. Rodman, University of Minnesota, USA 10. Chained To It: The Recurrence of the Frontier Hero in the Films of Quentin Tarantino Samuel P. Perry 11. "Crowdsourcing” "The Bad-Ass Slave": A critique of Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained Reynaldo Anderson, Harris-Stowe State University, USA, D.L. Stephenson, Western Connecticut State University, USA and Chante Anderson, Texas Southern University, USA 12. Guess Who’s Coming to Get Her: Stereotypes, Mythification, and White Redemption Ryan J. Weaver and Nichole K. Kathol, University of Wisconsin-Barron County, USA 13. Django Blues: Whiteness and Hollywood's continued failures David J. Leonard, Washington State University, USA Works Cited Notes on Contributors Index
The collected essays in this book examine aspects of race and representation in Quentin Tarantino's controversial film, Django Unchained.
Oliver C. Speck is Associate Professor of Film Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University, USA. His scholarly writing focuses on the representation of memory and history in French, German and other European cinema.
This collection, the first to focus exclusively on the successful
and controversial movie Django Unchained from the equally
successful and controversial Quentin Tarantino, covers an
impressively wide array of subjects and represents a variety of
interdisciplinary perspectives of the film—from questions about
race to the representation of violence. Quentin Tarantino’s Django
Unchained is an obvious choice for film scholars and students
interested in Tarantino.
*Timothy Corrigan, Professor of English, Cinema Studies, and
History of Art, University of Pennsylvania, USA, and author of The
Essay Film: From Montaigne, After Marker*
With a wide array of perspectives and an international roster of
scholars, Oliver Speck’s Django Unchained: The Continuation of
Metacinema presents an impressive collection of essays on what is
perhaps Tarantino’s most controversial film. The contributions
range across historical, theoretical, and critical analyses, each
offering worthwhile contributions to debates and discussions about
the film’s relation to violence, race, cinema, and history.
*Lisa Coulthard, Associate Professor of Film Studies, University of
British Columbia, Canada*
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