Lost in the funhouse: Allegorical horror and cognitive mapping in Jordan Peele’s Us

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Horror Studies Pub Date : 2021-03-01 DOI:10.1386/HOST_00032_1
M. Booker, Isra Daraiseh
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Jordan Peele’s Us (2019) is an entertaining horror film that also contains a number of interesting interpretive complications. The film is undoubtedly meant as a commentary on the inequity, inequality and injustice that saturate our supposedly egalitarian American society. Beyond that vague and general characterization, though, the film offers a number of interesting (and more specific) allegorical interpretations, none of which in themselves seem quite adequate. This article explores the plethora of signs that circulate through Us, demanding interpretation but defeating any definitive interpretation. This article explores the way Us offers clues to its meaning through engagement with the horror genre in general (especially the home invasion subgenre) and through dialogue with specific predecessors in the horror genre. At the same time, we investigate the rich array of other ways in which the film offers suggested political interpretations, none of which seem quite adequate. We then conclude, however, that such interpretive failures might well be a key message of the film, which demonstrates the difficulty of fully grasping the complex and difficult social problems of contemporary American society in a way that can be well described by Fredric Jameson’s now classic vision of the general difficulty of cognitive mapping in the late capitalist world.
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迷失在游乐场:乔丹·皮尔的《我们》中的寓言恐怖和认知映射
乔丹·皮尔的《我们》(2019)是一部有趣的恐怖电影,其中也包含了一些有趣的复杂解释。毫无疑问,这部电影是对充斥着我们所谓的平等主义美国社会的不平等、不平等和不公正的评论。然而,除了模糊和笼统的人物塑造之外,这部电影还提供了许多有趣(更具体)的寓言解释,但这些解释本身似乎都不太充分。这篇文章探讨了在《我们》中流传的大量迹象,这些迹象要求解释,但却击败了任何明确的解释。这篇文章探讨了《我们》如何通过与一般恐怖类型(尤其是入室盗窃亚类型)的接触,以及通过与恐怖类型中特定前辈的对话,为其含义提供线索。与此同时,我们调查了这部电影提供建议的政治解释的丰富的其他方式,这些似乎都不够。然而,我们随后得出结论,这种解释性的失败很可能是这部电影的一个关键信息,它表明了充分理解当代美国社会复杂而困难的社会问题的困难,弗雷德里克·詹姆森现在对资本主义世界晚期认知映射的普遍困难的经典愿景可以很好地描述这一点。
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来源期刊
Horror Studies
Horror Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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