恐怖与复仇:被压抑的殖民暴力的回归

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摘要

恐怖类型通常被理论化为一种文化形式,它将未解决但被压抑的社会困境戏剧化。就殖民主义的遗产而言,这种类型与情节剧一样,都有一种反复出现的回归结构,通过这种结构,人们可以面对过去的苦难和创伤。利用“意外到来”的惯例,这些电影进一步描绘了殖民统治和后殖民清算之间的问题关系。我在这里分析两部电影,虽然相隔几十年,但它们都以回归为主题的关键维度,构成了后殖民历史想象的重要概念组成部分。1966年的剧情片《叶来尚》是一部鲜为人知的“堕落的女人”电影,以1960年四月革命及其余波为背景影片对这一历史事件的提及迫使我们密切关注这场革命对非殖民化工程的影响。2007年上映的恐怖片《墓志铭》(Epitaph)属于最近的一批韩国电影,它们通过恐怖的棱镜关注韩国人对殖民现代性和城市生活的体验。这部电影的独特之处在于,在现代医学理性秩序的表象背后,设置了过度的暴力和幽灵般的困扰。通过对恐怖符号的使用,《墓志铭》呈现了韩国电影传统中罕见的殖民主体性的复杂写照
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Horror and Revenge: Return of the Repressed Colonial Violence
The horror genre has often been theorized as a cultural form that dramatizes unsettled but repressed social dilemmas. With respect to the legacy of colonialism, the genre shares with melodrama a recurring structure of return through which past suffering and trauma are confronted. Utilizing the convention of “the unexpected arrival,” such films furthermore delineate the problematic relationship between colonial rule and postcolonial reckonings. I here analyze two films that, although separated by several decades, both feature key dimensions of the theme of return that forms an important conceptual component of the postcolonial historical imagination. The 1966 melodrama Yeraishang is an obscure “fallen woman” film set against the backdrop of the April Revolution of 1960 and its aftermath.1 The film’s reference to that historic event compels us to pay close attention to the implications of the revolution for the project of decolonization. The 2007 horror film Epitaph belongs to a group of recent South Korean films that focus on Koreans’ experience of colonial modernity and urban life through the prism of horror. The film is unique for configuring excessive violence and spectral haunting behind the veneer of the rational order of modern medicine. Through its use of the signs of terror, Epitaph presents a complex portrayal of colonial subjectivity rare in the South Korean film tradition.2
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