Against heritage: Invented identities in science fiction film
-
Sky Marsen
Abstract
This article explores some innovations in the concept of identity in contemporary science fiction film. Using a narrative-semiotic method of analysis, the article discusses an emerging trend in science fiction that questions mainstream cultural beliefs regarding motivations for action and definitions of individual agency. Focusing on Alex Proyas's Dark City (1998) and Andrew Niccol's Gattaca (1997), the article traces the ways in which this trend rearranges elements in narrative positioning to bring to light relational possibilities that challenge privileged attitudes toward who we are and why we act the way we do. The selected films deal creatively with questions concerning the causal eects of past events, origins, or heritage, and give innovative answers to complex philosophical issues about the nature of reality. At the same time, they retain a popular aesthetic and a classical narrative structure. Their common characteristic is a narrative program composed of signs of resistance to notions of a fixed identity ‘caused’ by biography or genetic inheritance. These signs, furthermore, form the basis of unconventional interpretations of self and action that serve as catalysts in dismantling outmoded definitions of identity. The article explores these issues following a content-based approach that focuses on how agents and acts are constructed on the story level.
© Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Pursuing the meaning of meaning in the commercial world: An international review of marketing and consumer research founded on semiotics
- The role of Thomas Aquinas in the development of semiotic consciousness
- Against heritage: Invented identities in science fiction film
- Literary draft: The semiotic power of the lie
- Is cultural difference or sexual selection the cause of group conflict? Semiotics of culture during the Peloponnesian War
- Gestes performatifs, expression faciale et partage attentionnel : analyse de la poursuite oculaire à partir d'une scène dialogique
- The sign of the Other: On the semiotic of Emmanuel Levinas's Phenomenology
- Le problème des relations amour-haine-indifférence
Articles in the same Issue
- Pursuing the meaning of meaning in the commercial world: An international review of marketing and consumer research founded on semiotics
- The role of Thomas Aquinas in the development of semiotic consciousness
- Against heritage: Invented identities in science fiction film
- Literary draft: The semiotic power of the lie
- Is cultural difference or sexual selection the cause of group conflict? Semiotics of culture during the Peloponnesian War
- Gestes performatifs, expression faciale et partage attentionnel : analyse de la poursuite oculaire à partir d'une scène dialogique
- The sign of the Other: On the semiotic of Emmanuel Levinas's Phenomenology
- Le problème des relations amour-haine-indifférence