The Representation of Racism and Social Invisibility in Todd Phillips’ Joker (2019)

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Amira Rihab SAIDI

Abstract

The discourse of racism that has been per se attached to colored people is now linked to a wider circle, including whites. The essence of my article is to examine the “new racism” communicated by the Joker film by revisiting theories about modern racism. I will mainly rely on Michel Foucault’s state racism and internal racism explored in his lectures, Society Must Be Defended (1976) and his Abnormal Lectures at the College de France (1974-1975). Postmodernism proves that the notion of racism has transcended skin-color differences into distinctive forms of institutionalized discrimination. The fact that this discrimination is governmental, made the discourse of racism more complex. It has even been internalized into the mass population as the new mainstream model. This mainstream model excludes all “abnormals,” which could be the mentally ill, disabled people and criminals, or anyone who does not function properly in the capitalist society. The analysis of the film reveals that people with mitigating circumstances like disabled and clowns are otherized and ostracized on the accounts of their difference, thereby entering a pro tanto social invisibility


 


 

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How to Cite
SAIDI, A. R. (2023). The Representation of Racism and Social Invisibility in Todd Phillips’ Joker (2019). ALTRALANG Journal, 5(01), 310-321. https://doi.org/10.52919/altralang.v5i01.284
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Author Biography

Amira Rihab SAIDI, Institute of English and American Studies, University of Szeged, Hungary

Amira Rihab SAIDI is a second-year Ph.D. Student at the Doctoral School of Literary and Cultural Studies, Institute of English and American Studies, University of Szeged, Hungary. Her research discusses the filmic representation of the social oppositional movement to the mainstream political and social paradigm, especially within the discourse of masculinity and discrimination.