k film 3
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2 years ago
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CompositionHints1.doc
CloseReadingTechniques1.docx
NotesParasite1.pdf
kfilm31.docx
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CompositionHints1.doc
CloseReadingTechniques1.docx
How to do Close Reading /Textual Analysis
1. Make connections between the historical contexts and the given passages.
2. Make linkages between the given passages and the rest of the story, without losing your focus on the given passages.
3. Pay attention to details: expressions, phrasings, metaphors, images, etc. In the case of film, music video and other multi-medial cultural productions, pay attention to music, mise-en-scène, visual composition, perspectives, in addition to the verbal and narrative dimensions.
4. Make connections between the passages and the concepts/theories from the secondary sources discussed in class.
* Making associations (linguistic and conceptual), linkages and connections of different kinds among all things produces analysis.
NotesParasite1.pdf
1
Parasite
--Released in 2019
--Directed by Bong Joon-ho
Capitalisms
--"Historical Capitalism” (Immanuel Wallerstein)
--Industrial capitalism
--Colonial capitalism
--State capitalism
--Crony capitalism
--Racial capitalism
--Consumer capitalism
--Digital capitalism/ data capitalism
--"Surveillance capitalism” (Shoshana Zuboff)
--Finance capitalism (financialization of the global economy)
--“Debt capitalism”? (Jodi Kim, Settler Garrison: Debt Imperialism, Militarism, and
Transpacific Imaginaries, David Graeber, Debt: the First 5000 Yrs. )
Market economy/free enterprise, wage labor, profit-driven, private property/public sector,
growth, competition/monopoly capital, government regulations/deregulations, social
democracy (“welfare state”/ethical state/Keynesian economics against
rapacious/unbridled capital)
Question: Parasite does not delve into capitalism as a system, but it focuses on the results
of South Korean neoliberal capitalism, i.e., extreme polarization between the elite and
working classes. Where might be the moments in the movie where the “contradictions”
(opposition of social forces/economic classes) of the capitalist system are exposed and
contested?
2
What do you think was the global appeal of this movie?
Cf. capitalist universalism
Question: The movie combines at least two genres, domestic comedy (with some slapstick
comedy) and crime/horror. What are the ideological and aesthetic implication of the mix of
these two genres?
--the nuclear family as a social, economic unit (in the earlier decades, extended family)
--generational victimization, leading to a quasi-caste system
--also the unit of resistance and subversion
Question: Analyze the spaces in the movie, especially the vertical spaces. (e.g., stairs)
How do people move up and down these vertical spaces? Where in the narrative do these
spaces appear in the narrative? What happens in the semi-basement apartment? Who
lives in the underground bunker and why?
--their basement apartment vs. the basement bunker
--“wearable spaces”: the family’s adaptation to the new space of the rich family
Question: Mr. Park discusses with his wife how his chauffeur comes close to crossing the
line but he stops short of crossing it, which he approves of. What does he mean by this?
How does the family indeed “cross the line”? And to generalize, what may be the ways
that the working class can cross the line?
Question: The Park family note the smell of those who work for him? Why do they smell?
What is the material “symbolism” of the smell in the movie?
--"habitus”(Pierre Bourdieu, one’s milieu, environment of which one is part of)
3
Question: Mr. Park is a self-made man. Why is this important? What ideological labor does
this perform?
Question: The father and the son seem to disagree about whether to have a plan or not to
have one. What does this mean?
--plan: future (free will, labor, agency) vs. constraints of socio-economic systems.
Resistance vs. determinations by the system
Question: The horror genre part, i.e., the latter half of the movie, largely revolves around
the two working class families fighting against one another. What does this signify? Why
are they enemies of each other? Should they be?
The former housekeeper says, we are both “needy neighbors, we should help each other.”
Question: What are some of the other salient symbols that the movie presents to us?
“Indians”
Cockroaches / Parasites
Workers/working poor and ghosts
The rock