Artwork

Content provided by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Indiana Jones's last ride: A legacy to celebrate or bury?

30:11
 
Share
 

Manage episode 367399321 series 2861147
Content provided by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

I love watching a good adventure movie, especially at the start of summer. I have some great memories of eating popcorn in the local suburban movie theatre while we watched aliens take over a spaceship and a group of kids hunt for long-lost treasure in an underground cave.

At the same time, even as a kid, I remember thinking how awful some of the racial and gender stereotypes were.

I specifically remember watching Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and cringing at the representations onscreen, especially, the ruthless and flat-dimensioned South Asian characters and the ridiculous idea that Indians ate monkey brains – not to mention little Short Round, Indy’s child guide and sidekick played by the young Ke Huy Quan.

With the series, filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg showcased nostalgia for the early mid-century with Indiana Jones, the humanitarian Hunter College professor turned adventurer at the centre. Indy outran all kinds of harrows to ensure the ancient artifacts he chased ended up where he thought they belonged: "in a museum." (Another now famous line is from _Black Panther_ when Erik Killmonger asks a museum curator: "How do you think your ancestor's got these?")

Guilty pleasure or irredeemable Orientalism?

The final Indiana Jones movie, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny is coming out tomorrow, 42 years after the first movie was released.

As the series comes to an end, we explore Indy's complicated legacy — and his famous line: "it belongs in a museum."

Will the Indiana Jones franchise reflect the changes in anthropology departments and the growing movements from Indigenous and Global South communities to return stolen objects and ancestors from western museums? Will it consider that Eurocentric notions of what holds heritage has finally expanded beyond the artifact?

Will this new movie be full of highly problematic stories? Or a guilty pleasure? Or, can it be both?

Historian Christopher Heaney has spent a lot of time thinking about this. He’s written a book about the "original" Indiana Jones and wrote "Burying Indiana Jones" for the New Yorker. He’s a professor of Latin American History at Penn State University and he joined me on Don't Call Me Resilient — our last episode of the season, and just in time for summer blockbuster season — to unpack everything Indiana Jones.

  continue reading

77 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 367399321 series 2861147
Content provided by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Vinita Srivastava, The Conversation, Dannielle Piper, Krish Dineshkumar, Jennifer Moroz, Rehmatullah Sheikh, Kikachi Memeh, Ateqah Khaki, and Scott White or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

I love watching a good adventure movie, especially at the start of summer. I have some great memories of eating popcorn in the local suburban movie theatre while we watched aliens take over a spaceship and a group of kids hunt for long-lost treasure in an underground cave.

At the same time, even as a kid, I remember thinking how awful some of the racial and gender stereotypes were.

I specifically remember watching Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and cringing at the representations onscreen, especially, the ruthless and flat-dimensioned South Asian characters and the ridiculous idea that Indians ate monkey brains – not to mention little Short Round, Indy’s child guide and sidekick played by the young Ke Huy Quan.

With the series, filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg showcased nostalgia for the early mid-century with Indiana Jones, the humanitarian Hunter College professor turned adventurer at the centre. Indy outran all kinds of harrows to ensure the ancient artifacts he chased ended up where he thought they belonged: "in a museum." (Another now famous line is from _Black Panther_ when Erik Killmonger asks a museum curator: "How do you think your ancestor's got these?")

Guilty pleasure or irredeemable Orientalism?

The final Indiana Jones movie, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny is coming out tomorrow, 42 years after the first movie was released.

As the series comes to an end, we explore Indy's complicated legacy — and his famous line: "it belongs in a museum."

Will the Indiana Jones franchise reflect the changes in anthropology departments and the growing movements from Indigenous and Global South communities to return stolen objects and ancestors from western museums? Will it consider that Eurocentric notions of what holds heritage has finally expanded beyond the artifact?

Will this new movie be full of highly problematic stories? Or a guilty pleasure? Or, can it be both?

Historian Christopher Heaney has spent a lot of time thinking about this. He’s written a book about the "original" Indiana Jones and wrote "Burying Indiana Jones" for the New Yorker. He’s a professor of Latin American History at Penn State University and he joined me on Don't Call Me Resilient — our last episode of the season, and just in time for summer blockbuster season — to unpack everything Indiana Jones.

  continue reading

77 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide