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- Title
Oh the Monstrosity: Vigilante Mobs and Biopolitical Justice in 1930s Film.
- Authors
Kuhn, Lina
- Abstract
This article examines how Fritz Lang and Tod Browning use traditional cinematic monster tropes to demonstrate the impossibility of biopolitical classifications of monstrosity. No matter how intense its scrutiny, these directors suggest, biopower cannot accurately assess a group's or an individual's potential danger to society. Lang and Browning point out this inherent failure of absolutist categories through a series of visual parallels, first demonstrating the humanity of groups traditionally deemed abnormal and then revealing “true” monstrosity hidden behind a normal human exterior. The monster, however, contains elements of both the “normal” and “abnormal” groups, making clear the artifice of its label so that subsequent punishment remains morally ambivalent, contrary to monster movie convention.
- Subjects
MONSTERS in motion pictures; LANG, Fritz, 1890-1976; BROWNING, Tod, 1882-1962; HUMANITY; BIOPOLITICS (Philosophy)
- Publication
University of Toronto Quarterly, 2018, Vol 87, Issue 1, p62
- ISSN
0042-0247
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3138/utq.87.1.62