The Intelligence of the Female Adventurer:

P. Joseph
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The Showtime series Homeland (2011–) has typically been seen as a spy thriller, an instance of “terrorism TV,” or an example of prestige television. This article takes a long view of Homeland, treating its heroine, Carrie Mathison, as a female warrior-adventurer, a character with deep roots going back to eighteenth-century print culture. The essay proposes that Homeland resembles many popular print war narratives that define their female protagonists, whether cross-dressing soldiers or spies, as specially positioned for the discovery of a war’s secret, untold history. Marginalized by the military and denied a voice in official war narratives, women reenter the culture of war writing as intelligence heroes, in possession of a war narrative that has been hidden from public view. The article examines both the continuities between Homeland and earlier secret histories of war and the show’s adaptation to a contemporary media and historical environment. Contrary to earlier female warrior narratives, in which home threatens to confine the adventurer, Homeland treats the domestic realm as a space of adventure, where the rogue hero can investigate the wider world of war through binge watching and the forging of intimate relationships.
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女性冒险家的智慧:
Showtime电视台的剧集《国土安全》(2011 -)通常被视为间谍惊悚片,是“恐怖主义电视”的一个例子,或者是声望电视的一个例子。本文从长远的角度看待《国土安全》,把女主角嘉莉·马西森(Carrie Mathison)视为一位女战士兼冒险家,这个角色的深刻根源可以追溯到18世纪的印刷文化。这篇文章提出,《国土安全》类似于许多流行的纸质战争叙事,它们将女性主角——无论是变装的士兵还是间谍——定义为专门为发现一场战争的秘密、不为人知的历史而设的角色。女性被军队边缘化,在官方战争叙事中被剥夺了发言权,她们以情报英雄的身份重新进入战争写作文化,拥有一种一直隐藏在公众视野之外的战争叙事。这篇文章探讨了《国土安全》与早期战争秘史之间的连续性,以及该剧对当代媒体和历史环境的适应。在早期的女性战士叙事中,家庭可能会限制冒险家,与之相反,《国土安全》将家庭领域视为冒险的空间,在这里,流氓英雄可以通过疯狂观看和建立亲密关系来调查更广阔的战争世界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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