Updates on posts about Bound (1996)
I am just posting this to say that even if you read the series of posts on the movie Bound before (when each post had a “part x” in its title), they are very different now and worth re-reading.
However, I am not done updating them yet, and so if it still has a “part x” in its title, then it is the same post from before.
Thanks
Paikea as Sovereign and Homo Sacer
I would like to propose a possible reading of the movie Whale Rider, in particular the fact that Paikea must, to make her grandfather respect her, go out to sea and (almost) drown. I want to compare this with Giorgio Agamben’s analysis of the king’s two bodies in Homo Sacer. My basic thesis is that Read more »
Bound and Bisexuality part 6
I will start with the scene that ends in Caesar’s death. He has just knocked Corky out when Violet comes in with a gun. Violet tells Caesar that it is all over, that she has called Micky, and that he had better run. Caesar protests that Violet still does not know him after all of the years they had spent together. Caesar begins to go for the gun that’s lying on the floor. Violet tells him to stop, but Caesar does not believe that Violet can shoot him. Violet says, “Caesar, you don’t know shit” and then we see her fire the gun again and again at him, as blood starts hitting the paint and he falls down.
The scene obviously recalls certain other scenes in the movie. First, Read more »
“Bound” (1996) – Gorgio Agamben vs. William Connolly
In this post I seek to examine Andy and Larry Wachowski’s film “Bound” from the perspective (once again) of Giorgio Agamben. This time I want to go over the scene where Caesar kills Gino (played by Richard Sarafian). I suggest that Caesar’s ability to kill Gino is a good illustration of the figure of homo sacer within the sovereign. I want to then consider William Connolly’s criticism of Agamben, and relate that back to the film – showing how there is Read more »
Bound’s (1996) Politics of Becoming
This post I want to once again visit Andy and Larry Wachowski’s film “Bound” – this time from the perspective of William Connolly’s Bergsonian idea of duration (as advanced in his book Pluralism). The specific scene that is of interest is the scene where Corky and Violet plan to steal the money. It is a scene that has a number of temporal oddities that well reflects the temporal politics of becoming. My thesis is that Bound, in this scene, gives a good representation Read more »
Bisexuality and the Exception in “Bound” (1996)
I think that the Andy and Larry Wachowski’s film “Bound” is an interesting case for examining the exclusions that found what Robert Cover calls nomoi. This article is an attempt to analyze two scenes from the movie in light of the idea that every normative universe is founded Read more »
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