Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

(De)constructing “America”: the Case of Emir Kusturica’s Arizona Dream (1993)

2010; European Association for American Studies; Volume: 5; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4000/ejas.8653

ISSN

1991-9336

Autores

David Roche,

Tópico(s)

Cuban History and Society

Resumo

By means of an analysis of Kusturica's only film about America, Arizona Dream, this article argues that while the United States offers a vision of a united society founded on diversity, it also represses, altering in the process both society and the landscape. National unity is consequently a dream – a dream the film suggests that has often been dreamed up by un-Americans. Filtered through Kusturica's own perceptions of America – and his position on the Balkan War (1991-2001) – the film seems to suggest sadness at the loss of a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural perspective. Through its representations of geography and ethnic diversity, and its dense network of filmic citations, what Arizona Dream ultimately offers is consequently a European auteur's view of the United States rather than a systematic deconstruction of the "imagined community" of "America."

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