That was a great article Carol. When I initially scanned it and responded, I 
mistakenly thought that you had posted a published commentary written by 
someone else. On a second close reading I realized that it was your own 
insightful original composition. Your emphasis on the racialized sexual 
dynamics is key, and I certainly didn't know the information about King Kong 
being one of  Hitler's favorite films.   Thanks very much for your researchand 
exposition which adds to the many dimensions of analysis about this important 
symbol-laden story.
   
  Yusuf 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  _http://hnn.us/articles/19983.html_ (http://hnn.us/articles/19983.html) 

   
This holiday season the dreams and nightmares of Western culture are  
apparently battling for dominance at the Hollywood box office. The Disney  
studio’s 
film adaptation of the C. S. Lewis classic Chronicles of  Narnia, with its 
Christian message of redemption, is being challenged for  financial supremacy 
by 
director Peter Jackson’s King Kong, which  continues to draw upon the 
dominant 
culture’s fear of the “other,” dating back  to the captivity narratives 
of 
colonial America. Kong’s current status  as number one at the box office 
suggests that cultural fear of the primitive  “other” may outweigh the 
redemptive 
powers of a muscular Christianity. 
Jackson’s King Kong, unlike the 1973 remake and various low  budget cinematic 
reincarnations of the giant ape, is an attempt to do a faithful  adaptation 
of the 1933 classic film; albeit with the flash of computer  technology and 
contemporary special effects. Like his lavish Lord of the  Rings trilogy, 
Jackson’
s King Kong is an entertaining film, but what  is perhaps most interesting 
about the continuing cultural fascination with the  giant ape from Skull Island 
is how the legend of King Kong plays upon the  racial insecurities of white 
Americans.  
Kong represents both the brutality and nobility of the savage, while blond  
Ann Darrow (with Naomi Watts reprising the role played by Fay Wray in the  
original) as Kong’s captive symbolizes both the purity and vulnerability of  
white 
civilization. The mythology of King Kong draws much of its power  from the 
contrast between Kong’s blackness and Darrow’s whiteness. Darrow is  both 
repelled and attracted to the primitive Kong. The sexual ambiguity is  
titillating, 
but in the final analysis whiteness and civilization must be  rescued by an 
appropriate white savior (in Kong this role is played by  Adrian Brody as the 
writer Jack Driscoll) to remove the threat of miscegenation  posed by Kong. It 
is no wonder that the 1933 version of Kong was reportedly  Adolph Hitler’s 
favorite film and played into his racial theories outlined in  Mein Kampf. The 
cultural appeal of Kong to Americans, however, probably  resonates best with 
the 
history of race relations between white settlers and  Native Americans as 
well as black and white Americans dating back to the brutal  institution of 
slavery. These images of conflict are, of course, also apparent  for the threat 
to 
white culture posed by the Asian and Latino “other.” 
American colonials were enthralled with tales of white women torn from their  
communities by Indian raids. Perhaps the best known of these early accounts 
is  that of Mary White Rowlandson, the wife of a Congregational minister. She 
was  eventually ransomed and returned to her husband, while the narrative of 
her  captivity became a best-seller in colonial America. In Regeneration 
Through 
Violence, historian Richard Slotkin asserts that in the captivity narrative  
“a single individual, usually a woman, stands passively under the strokes of  
evil, awaiting rescue by the grace of God. The sufferer represents the whole, 
chastened body of Puritan society, and the temporary bondage of the captive 
to  the Indian is dual paradigm—of the bondage of the soul to the flesh and 
the  temptations arising from original sin. . . .” Perhaps Narnia and  Kong 
are 
not really so separate in Western mythology. 
The popular captivity narratives soon found their way into American  
literature with James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans. In  the 
twentieth 
century, numerous Hollywood films employed the frontier experience  to exploit 
the nation’s racial and cultural fears. One of the most classic  examples of 
this genre is director John Ford’s The Searchers (1956)  starring John Wayne 
as 
Ethan Edwards, searching for his niece Debbie (Natalie  Wood), who was 
captured by the Comanche. Since she became the wife of Comanche  chief Scar, 
Edwards 
plans to kill her and eradicate the sin of miscegenation.  Instead, Edwards 
kills Scar and restores Debbie to white civilization. 
By making Native Americans a product of the nineteenth-century frontier and  
generally ignoring them in contemporary American culture, filmmakers have  
reduced white racial anxiety regarding the Indian “other.” The racial  
implications of white and black, however, remain at the core of American  
society. 
Sexual exploitation of black women by white men was an integral part of  the 
slave 
experience, but with the institution of slavery available to control  the 
black population, fears of liaisons between black men and white women did  not 
dominate white concerns. With the end of slavery and increasing efforts by  
black men to exercise the suffrage, whites became threatened by images of black 
 
empowerment. Culturally, these fears of black political power were often  
manifested in assertions that black men were preying upon white women, the  
symbol 
of white civilization and privilege. Accusations by white women of rape  by 
black men were the excuse given for numerous lynchings and race riots,  ranging 
from the violence against the black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma during  the 
1920s to the murder of Emmett Till in the 1950s. The racial divisions over  the 
O. J. Simpson murder trial in the 1990s must be viewed within this  context. 
Early twentieth-century culture reflected these racial anxieties regarding  
miscegenation with Thomas Dixon’s novel The Clansman and its film  adaptation 
by D. W. Griffith in The Birth of a Nation. In Griffith’s  classic film, 
black 
men prey upon pure, white womanhood. In the image of blacks  binding the blond 
Elise Stoneman (Lillian Gish) and the black brute Silas Lynch  (George 
Siegmann) attempting to carry her off under his arm, we have King  Kong and the 
blond Ann Darrow. In the case of Elise Stoneman, rescue comes  through the 
formation of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, who save white  womanhood, 
civilization, and political power. Although not as crude as The  Birth of a 
Nation, the 
film adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With  the Wind (1939) perpetuates 
similar themes when poor Southern whites and  freedmen attempt to rape Scarlet 
O’
Hara, symbolizing the rape of Southern  civilization during Reconstruction. 
And efforts at integration during the early  days of the Civil Rights Movement 
were met with the refrain that racial mixing  would lead to miscegenation or 
as it was more crudely expressed by some Southern  whites, “How would you 
like 
one to marry your sister.” 
It is within this cultural context of racial relations and captivity  
narratives that we must place the powerful mythology of King Kong.  Jackson 
attempts 
to offset the racial implications of the story by introducing a  heroic black 
sailor Hayes (Evan Park), who is paternalistic in his caring for  the young 
white Jeremy (Jaimie Bell) rather than sexually aggressive toward  Darrow. 
Nevertheless, the natives of Skull Island, which is supposedly located  near 
Sumatra, still tend to resemble the stereotypical Africans of an old Tarzan  
film, 
and they seem to enjoy placing the helpless young blond woman in bondage.  
Peter Jackson’s film is an entertaining high-tech action picture, but it is 
well  
worth remembering the powerful and dangerous cultural myths which have clouded 
our history and are embodied in the legend of King Kong. 

Carole  McDonnell  
If bounced, please use my alternate email: carole.mcdonnell  (at) gmail  
(dot)com
www.geocities.com/scifiwritir/OreoBlues.html
www.blogitorium.com/TheSecularChristian


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