Of Comics and Charisma: Representing Transpacific White Masculinities
Abstract This article employs palimpsestuous reading practices to query the transpacific reach and imperial pedigree of the comic strip “Charisma Man.” Turning to Max Weber’s theory of “charismatic authority” to understand the comic’s humorous portrayals of white male heterosexual privilege in Asia, the article proposes that the comic strip illuminates the patterns of raced and gendered “hereditary charisma” that continue to haunt transpacific relations. “Charisma Man,” penned by a team of North American men living in Japan, links contemporary white migrants across Asia – especially native English teachers – with a longue durée of Euro-American imperial actors abroad and builds meaning through intertextual engagement with the iconic cultural texts Superman and Madame Butterfly . The article concludes that “Charisma Man” makes light of white male hereditary charisma in Asia through a layering of temporally-disjointed transpacific discourses and, in turn, adds one more layer to a palimpsestuous sedimentation of sexist and racist hierarchies, normalizing their continuation within contemporary globalization.
Year of publication: |
2020
|
---|---|
Authors: | Owens, Christina D. |
Published in: |
New Global Studies. - De Gruyter, ISSN 1940-0004, ZDB-ID 2401183-6. - Vol. 15.2020, 1, p. 47-72
|
Publisher: |
De Gruyter |
Subject: | charisma man | masculinity | native English teachers | palimpsest | transpacific studies | whiteness |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Bohonos, Jeremy W., (2023)
-
Connectivity in the Multi-Layered City: Towards the Sustainable City
Brown, Bob, (2011)
-
Self‐reflexivity as the practice of empathy
Katila, Saija, (2013)
- More ...