Reconstructing Violence: The Southern Rape Complex in Film and Literature

Reconstructing Violence: The Southern Rape Complex in Film and Literature

by Deborah E. Barker
Reconstructing Violence: The Southern Rape Complex in Film and Literature

Reconstructing Violence: The Southern Rape Complex in Film and Literature

by Deborah E. Barker

Hardcover

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Overview

In this bold study of cinematic depictions of violence in the south, Deborah E. Barker explores the ongoing legacy of the "southern rape complex" in American film. Taking as her starting point D. W. Griffith's infamous The Birth of a Nation, Barker demonstrates how the tropes and imagery of the southern rape complex continue to assert themselves across a multitude of genres, time periods, and stylistic modes.
Drawing from Gilles Deleuze's work on cinema, Barker examines plot, dialogue, and camera technique as she considers several films: The Story of Temple Drake (1933), Sanctuary (1958), Touch of Evil (1958), To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), and Cape Fear (1962). Placing this body of analysis in the context of the historical periods when these films appeared and the literary sources on which they are based, Barker reveals the protean power of cinematic racialized violence amid the shifting cultural and political landscapes of the South and the nation as a whole.
By focusing on familiar literary and cinematic texts — each produced or set during moments of national crisis such as the Great Depression or the civil rights movement — Barker's Reconstructing Violence offers fresh insights into the anxiety that has underpinned sexual and racial violence in cinematic representations of the South.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807160626
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press
Publication date: 11/11/2015
Series: Southern Literary Studies
Pages: 282
Sales rank: 1,130,491
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Deborah E. Barker is professor of English at the University of Mississippi. She is the author of Aesthetics and Gender in American Literature: The Portrait of the Woman Artist and the coeditor, with Kathryn McKee, of American Cinema and the Southern Imaginary.

What People are Saying About This

Matthew Bernstein

"An outstanding work of literary and film scholarship. With a sharp eye for previously neglected details and an impressive grasp of historical context and aesthetic traditions, Deborah Barker provides an always illuminating, always engaging account of this tenacious and protean representational trope and how it configures race, class and gender across the decades." -- Matthew Bernstein, author of Screening a Lynching: The Leo Frank Case on Film and Television

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