‘The tropics make it difficult to mope’: The imaginative geography of Alexander Payne’s The Descendants (2011)

Authors

  • Carolina Sánchez-Palencia University of Seville
DOI: https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes/2015/2/222671
Keywords: imaginative geographies, spatial-subjective systems, cinematic landscape, Paradise myth, The Descendants

Abstract

This paper analyses the cinematic landscape of The Descendants (Payne, 2011) by engaging with Edward Said’s concept of “imaginative geographies” (Orientalism, 1978), a theoretical approach that addresses the interaction between the material and the symbolic in spatial representation. I also draw from Henri Lefebvre (The Production of Space, 1974) to explain how Alexander Payne renders space and subjectivity as mutually constitutive. The Descendants’ powerful analogies between family ties and land ties would illustrate this spatial-subjective system in interesting metaphoric parallels. In a similar vein, Lefebvre’s emphasis on the importance of capitalism in the social construction of spaces helps articulate the film’s discussion of Hawaiian land trade politics and the protagonists’ ambivalent relation to it. This reading of the film can be inserted into the context of contemporary revisitations of the Paradise mythology as inextricably bound to postcolonial questions of ecology, nation and globalization.

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Author Biography

Carolina Sánchez-Palencia, University of Seville

Carolina Sánchez-Palencia Carazo is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of English and American Literature of the University of Seville. She is a current member of the research group "Postmodern Discourses" (HUM-399) and her major fields of research and publication are Contemporary Literatures in English and Gender and Postcolonial Studies.
Published
18-12-2015
How to Cite
Sánchez-Palencia, C. (2015). ‘The tropics make it difficult to mope’: The imaginative geography of Alexander Payne’s The Descendants (2011). International Journal of English Studies, 15(2), 81–95. https://doi.org/10.6018/ijes/2015/2/222671
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