Abstract

This article examines how the global traumas of resource-driven conflicts and acts of terrorism are mapped in 21st-century US and UK narrative cinema, and suggests that guilt, elicited in the implied Western viewer, is displaced in the films onto images of Western women. Revisiting Mulvey’s influential theory of ‘visual pleasure’ through the ‘male gaze’, this article analyses the films Traffic (2000), a depiction of US complicity with global drug cartels, Babel (2006), the story of a global media frenzy surrounding American tourists victimized in Morocco, and three films about crises in Africa: Shooting Dogs (2005), a dramatization of Western apathy during the 1994 Rwandan genocide, The Constant Gardener (2005), about pharmaceutical testing in Kenya, and Lord of War (2005), based upon the life of an arms dealer. A theoretical re-engagement with feminist film theory is followed by analyses of the films to illustrate how the guilt elicited by each of the films’ traumatic contexts conjoins with the primal psychological experience of lack. Viewers’ and their screen surrogates’ combined sense of helplessness in the face of others’ trauma is displaced ‘hysterically’ onto images of women, exposing a troubling new looking relation in our traumatic age.

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