ABSTRACT

Breaking Down Joker offers a compelling, multi-disciplinary examination of a landmark film and media event that was simultaneously both celebrated and derided, and which arrived at a time of unprecedented social malaise. The collection breaks down Joker to explore its aesthetic and ideological representations within the social and cultural context in which it was released.

An international team of authors explore Joker’s sightlines and subtexts, the affective relationships, corrosive ideologies, and damning, if ambivalent, messages of this film. The chapters address such themes as white masculinity, identity and perversion, social class and mobility, urban loneliness, movement and music, and questions of reception and activism.

With contributions from scholars from screen studies, theatre and performance studies, psychology and psychoanalysis, geography, cultural studies, and sociology, this fully interdisciplinary collection offers a uniquely multiple operational cross-examination of this pivotal film text and will be of great importance to scholars, students, and researchers in these areas.

chapter |9 pages

Breaking down Joker

Violence, loneliness, tragedy

section Section I|52 pages

Divided space

chapter 1|11 pages

All the world's a stage

Reading space(s) in Todd Phillips' Joker

chapter 2|12 pages

Joker and Gotham City

Identity correspondence. The political value in the evocation of New York City in the 1970s and the imaginary of the new Hollywood thriller

chapter 3|11 pages

Joker

Madly walking and dancing through space

chapter 4|16 pages

New York is dead

The Joker steps and urban melancholia

section Section II|53 pages

Mediated uprisings

chapter 5|13 pages

Send in the clowns

Joker, vigilante films, and populist revolt

chapter 6|12 pages

Looking at and with images

Crowds in Joker, Joker in the crowd

chapter 7|13 pages

Resisting tyranny with laughter

Joker and the Arab revolutions

chapter 8|13 pages

Joker

Toxic masculinity, the instigation of (political) violence, and the protection of minors in Greece

section Section III|41 pages

Violating genre

section Section IV|53 pages

Breaking the ideal man

chapter 13|14 pages

A Monster We (Re) Make

Family violence and monstrous masculinity in Joker

chapter 14|14 pages

The Joker and man in the mirror

Through chaos to true identity

chapter 15|11 pages

Lives of precarity in the age of neoliberalism

The tales untold