Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937

This paper discusses the role of the border of the island as a complex aesthetic zone in the journals of early European and American navigators in the South Seas (such as George Robertson, James Cook, Benjamin Morrell and Charles Wilkes) and in 1920s/1930s American films set on tropical islands. The...

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Main Author: Johannes Riquet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2014-07-01
Series:Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3060
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author Johannes Riquet
author_facet Johannes Riquet
author_sort Johannes Riquet
collection DOAJ
description This paper discusses the role of the border of the island as a complex aesthetic zone in the journals of early European and American navigators in the South Seas (such as George Robertson, James Cook, Benjamin Morrell and Charles Wilkes) and in 1920s/1930s American films set on tropical islands. The fascination of the early explorers’ descriptions of islands as viewed from the water, across a distance that is physical as much as cultural, resides in the entanglement of perception, expectation and imagination that marks these journeys as both intense and profoundly uncertain visual experiences. In the 1920s, US-American representations of tropical islands gained new currency as American tourists trooped to the South Seas. As I argue, the strong visuality of the early accounts is one of the reasons why cinema could so readily pick up on them. In films like White Shadows in the South Seas (1929) and The Hurricane (1937), the imaginative transformation in the gaze from the water is associated with the camera as it explores the island in lateral tracking shots. These films cast a critical look on contemporary Western enthusiasm for ‘exotic’ cultures and locations in which they nevertheless participate. Resonating with contemporary anthropological and documentary film practices, emphasizing authentic representation of native cultures (Malinowski and Flaherty, respectively), they nevertheless point to the camera’s own crossing of the island’s border as an act of appropriation. This appropriation becomes explicit in King Kong (1933) as, armed with cameras and guns, the diegetic film crew violently crosses the borders of/on the island. Significantly, it is only after Kong’s death at the highest point of another island (Manhattan) and at another border, now between land and sky, that he fascinates the masses as an aesthetic spectacle. The film, then, meditates on the relations between border crossing, death and the production of aesthetics.
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spelling doaj.art-3d8aa9fa7bd44a279ba7b82dd334f4862024-02-02T07:24:26ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingNordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur0809-16681503-20862014-07-013110.7557/13.30602835Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937Johannes Riquet0University of ZurichThis paper discusses the role of the border of the island as a complex aesthetic zone in the journals of early European and American navigators in the South Seas (such as George Robertson, James Cook, Benjamin Morrell and Charles Wilkes) and in 1920s/1930s American films set on tropical islands. The fascination of the early explorers’ descriptions of islands as viewed from the water, across a distance that is physical as much as cultural, resides in the entanglement of perception, expectation and imagination that marks these journeys as both intense and profoundly uncertain visual experiences. In the 1920s, US-American representations of tropical islands gained new currency as American tourists trooped to the South Seas. As I argue, the strong visuality of the early accounts is one of the reasons why cinema could so readily pick up on them. In films like White Shadows in the South Seas (1929) and The Hurricane (1937), the imaginative transformation in the gaze from the water is associated with the camera as it explores the island in lateral tracking shots. These films cast a critical look on contemporary Western enthusiasm for ‘exotic’ cultures and locations in which they nevertheless participate. Resonating with contemporary anthropological and documentary film practices, emphasizing authentic representation of native cultures (Malinowski and Flaherty, respectively), they nevertheless point to the camera’s own crossing of the island’s border as an act of appropriation. This appropriation becomes explicit in King Kong (1933) as, armed with cameras and guns, the diegetic film crew violently crosses the borders of/on the island. Significantly, it is only after Kong’s death at the highest point of another island (Manhattan) and at another border, now between land and sky, that he fascinates the masses as an aesthetic spectacle. The film, then, meditates on the relations between border crossing, death and the production of aesthetics.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3060islandSouth Seasborder aestheticscameracultural contactperception
spellingShingle Johannes Riquet
Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
island
South Seas
border aesthetics
camera
cultural contact
perception
title Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
title_full Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
title_fullStr Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
title_full_unstemmed Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
title_short Killing King Kong: the camera at the borders of the tropical island, 1767-1937
title_sort killing king kong the camera at the borders of the tropical island 1767 1937
topic island
South Seas
border aesthetics
camera
cultural contact
perception
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3060
work_keys_str_mv AT johannesriquet killingkingkongthecameraatthebordersofthetropicalisland17671937