Frello Transformations24
Frello Transformations24
Frello Transformations24
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ISSN 1444-3775
Other critics have focused on the historical context of the film, involving
the dichotomous world view of the Cold War and the nascent civil rights
movement (cf. Slotkin). The Searchers is sometimes read as an early
”revisionist” Western (cf. Eckstein “Introduction”), and at any rate the
1950s were marked by an emerging questioning of the hegemonic
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Critics who focus on the film’s representation of race often emphasise the
fact that Ethan Edwards’ heroic but problematic position depends on his
transgression of the racial divide in terms of knowledge as well as in
terms of the dichotomy between barbarism and civilisation with which
this divide is conventionally associated (cf. Slotkin; Prats). My analysis
draws on these readings but also diverges from them, primarily by
focusing on how the possibility of legitimately transgressing the racial
divide is unequally distributed and unequally invested with agency,
dependent not only on race but also on gender and age (cf. Henderson). I
employ what I term an analytics of hybridity in order to study the
distribution of legitimate and illegitimate blending and how this
determines the distribution of agency in the film.
The Film
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The scene is set for a ”classic” Western that assumes the white settlers’
perspective. Civilisation faces Barbarism: A peaceful settler community is
the innocent victim of a bloody assault committed by Indians for no
apparent reason (cf. Kitses 99). A more comprehensive summary,
however, reveals the complexities.
Towards the end of the film Ethan and Martin and a group of local
rangers prepare an attack on Scar’s village. Martin insists that they save
Debbie first – against the will of Ethan who comments that ”livin’ with
Comanches ain’t bein’ alive.” Martin sneaks into the village, finds Debbie
who willingly comes with him, and kills Scar. When the rangers attack,
Ethan scalps Scar and pursues a fleeing Debbie. She falls and looks at him,
terrified, as he closes in on her. But he lifts her up and says, quietly: ”Let’s
go home, Debbie.”
The last scene shows riders approaching the house of the Jorgensen
family. Ethan rides in front with Debbie leaning in to him like a child. He
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carries her to the porch where Mr and Mrs Jorgensen welcome her. Then
everybody enters the house, except Ethan, who remains standing for a
while, then turns and walks away.
An analytics of hybridity
Far from invalidating a critical focus on hybridity, I will argue that this
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burdened history adds to the relevance of the concept since it indicates the
depth of what is at stake in constructing, reconstructing and displacing
ideas of purity. My inspiration for focusing on hybridity comes primarily
from cultural studies and postcolonial theory (cf. Ang; Bhabha; Hall),
where it is employed in order to highlight the destabilisation and
displacement of established and hierarchical identities and identity
categories, thus providing a critical perspective on essentialist notions of
culture and race. Analysing The Searchers through the lens of hybridity
thus directs our attention to the ambivalences involved in the seemingly
polar universe of White versus Indian. When employing an analytical
approach to hybridity it is, however, vital not only to focus on the
destabilisation and displacement of essentialised categories but also to be
attentive to the fact that not all hybrid positions function in the same way.
Different in-between positions cannot be reduced to a simple middle
ground since they are constituted in different ways, and they cannot be
harmonised into a peaceful cultural or racial blending, since they are
based on historical atrocities and tied up with power differences.
However, the transgression of racial and cultural categories does not
automatically destabilise these categories. It may in fact contribute to their
fixation. An analytics of hybridity therefore focuses on the specific
discursive constitution of different hybrid positions, particularly in terms
of legitimate and illegitimate blending and in terms of how this is related
to the distribution of agency (cf. Frello). Furthermore, the ways in which
each category is transgressed, intersect with other socio-cultural
categories. Therefore an analysis of hybridity is also an intersectional
analysis in the sense that when focusing on race one should pay attention
to how race is lived through other sociocultural categories, such as gender
and age, in the specific context.
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First I will take a brief look at the simple reproduction of categories. This
is most obviously found in the scenes with Look and the captive white
women. The portrayal of Look is downright racist: she is a comic figure
that Ethan and Martin can legitimately push around and laugh about (cf.
Eyman; Sharrett; Pye; Kitses). This portrayal contributes to establishing
and preserving a dichotomy between Whites and Indians, making Martin
and Ethan appear as representatives of Reason and Civilisation, while
Look appears primitive and ridiculous.
The scene with the captive white women is more complicated since it
demonstrates and depreciates Ethan’s racism by focusing on his twisted,
hateful face. It is thus one of the scenes in which the film clearly exposes –
rather than endorses – white racism (cf. Eckstein “Introduction”). Yet still
the gap between White and Indian is legitimised through the portrayal of
the women as mad (Pye): white women who are forced to live among
Indians may not become ”Comanche,” such as Ethan contemptuously
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remarks, but the fact that they are described as mad indicates that no
liveable space can exist across the boundary between White and Indian, at
least not for women.
Despite the fact that it is Debbie and Martin who most obviously
transgress the distinction between White and Indian, still it is Ethan who
emerges as the single most ambivalent figure in light of this distinction.
He is the Indian hater who wants to kill his beloved niece when he
suspects that she was ”tainted” by the Indian Scar. He is supposed to be
guarding the boundary between the Civilised and the Savage, but he
transgresses this boundary repeatedly throughout the film: shooting out
the eyes of an already dead Indian, and killing buffalos with the sole
purpose of preventing the Comanches from hunting. And as remarked in
numerous studies of the film, Scar is in many ways portrayed as Ethan’s
alter ego – a portrayal that both questions the polarity between White and
Indian and underlines the ambiguity of the Ethan-character and of his
quest (cf. Cantor; Buscombe; Day; Reiter; Eckstein “Incest and
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Miscegenation”; Pippin).
It is Martin, not Ethan, who eventually kills Scar. The portrayal of Martin
does not, however, involve any of the hatred and ferocity that
characterises Ethan, who in Eyman’s words, ”hates Indians for their
Savagery and takes their scalps for killing his relatives, he despises
Martin’s Cherokee blood and makes him his heir, he wants to kill his niece
for having sex with an Indian and he embraces her and takes her safely
home. Ethan is a monster and he is John Wayne” (155).
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A first analysis thus reveals that Martin, the eighth-part Indian, comes to
occupy the White position – as Ethan’s heir – while Debbie is expelled and
placed in the position of the Other – the Indian. However, this is not a
simple reversal of racial belonging, since the White/Indian-dichotomy
turns out to be ambiguous: in Martin’s case, Indianness is constituted by
blood, while in Debbie’s case it is constituted by (suspected) sexual
contact.
Slotkin relates the story about Debbie to the traditional captivity narrative,
which he describes as follows:
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The same situation that justifies the hero’s revenge on the Indian, namely
the sexual defilement of the White Woman, also makes it unnecessary to
save her, because the defilement removes her from the white sphere and
makes her terminally Indian. Thus, the woman is no longer a person
worth saving. Her only significance lies in the fact that it is her abduction
that justifies the action of the hero.
This narrative is not left unchallenged in the film. While the captured
woman in conventional captivity-stories usually resists a ”fate worse than
death” and preserves her virginity until the hero saves her, this is not the
case in The Searchers. Debbie transgresses the boundary to Indianness first
and foremost by her (alleged) sexual relations with Scar. And the
narrative of the film does not support Ethan’s rejection of her: Martin’s
insistence on saving her contributes to the portrayal of him as the civilised
of the two. Furthermore, Debbie is endowed with an agency that is
usually absent from traditional captivity-stories: She is not only a victim
but a woman who is (at least temporarily) capable of making her own
choice of belonging.
While Martin sustains his Whiteness through his own agency, Debbie’s
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position is ultimately not settled by her, but by the men who surround
her. The possibility of crossing the boundary between White and Indian
turns out to be gender-specific; firstly, because Debbie’s hybrid position
becomes a matter not of her agency but of defilement, and therefore
cannot endow her with superior knowledge as the one who ”knows the
Indian”; and secondly, because others determine whether her
transgression is acceptable and, if not, whether she can be ”restored” as
white. Ultimately then, she is reduced to being the object of the men’s
quest – in accordance with the captivity myth.
It is often noted that the initial scene in which Ethan greets the child
Debbie by lifting her up is repeated in the scene in which Ethan lifts up
the young woman Debbie in order to bring her ”home” (Lehman;
Bronfen). In my analysis the significance of this repetition lies in the way
that it works by symbolically portraying Debbie as a child, thereby
”deleting” the intervening period, including her sexual contact with Scar.
Harmony is restored because ”Debbie once again can become a child to a
loving mother” as Studlar remarks (192). My point is, however, that if
harmony is to be restored within the universe of the film, this ”loving
mother” must be white. Thus, contrary to Bronfen who argues that the
inclusion of Martin and Debbie in the white Settler community unsettles
the Whiteness of this community, I argue that the ending confirms rather
than transgresses the racialised universe of the classic Western: the
”solution” – the elimination of tension and restoring of normality –
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Conclusion
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that Ethan is indeed a monster, but he is also John Wayne. Ethan’s duality
as a monster and a hero is portrayed as a problem, but also as a legitimate
position that occupies an established discursive space in American
history. He is the man who ”knows the Indian” and who must transgress
the boundary of civilisation in order to protect it.
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I have chosen The Searchers as the object of analysis because of the position
it holds as an early “revisionist” Western that challenges the normative
foundations of the genre, while still fully functioning as a “traditional”
Western in terms of the overall narrative. The Searchers is interesting today
because it – despite itself and its confirmation of conventional
understandings of race – displays the complexity of racial categories and
their conflation with other socio-cultural categories. The history of the
Western is full of examples of films that use the format while challenging
its usual politics – often through depicting some of the leading characters
as somehow transgressing conventional categories, such as lieutenant
Dunbar (Kevin Costner) in Dances with Wolves and the homosexual
cowboys (played by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal) in Brokeback
Mountain, just to mention two acclaimed and very different examples. By
focusing not only on the transgression of categories but also on the
distribution of legitimate agency, an analytics of hybridity can unravel the
tensions and contradictions that are often found in representations that
struggle to overcome stereotypes and dichotomisations that are also part
of the basic cultural narratives of their genre, time and society.
Endnotes
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Works Cited
Bandy, Mary Lea, and Kevin Stoehr. Ride, Boldly Ride. The Evolution of
the American Western. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012.
Böhnke, Michael. “Myth and Law in the Films of John Ford.” Journal of
Law and Society 28.1 (2001): 47–63.
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Eyman, Scott John Ford : the Searcher 1894-1973. Ed. Paul Duncan. Köln:
Taschen, 2004. Print.
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Kitses, Jim. Horizons West. Directing the Western from John Ford to Clint
Eastwood. New Edition. London: BFI Publishing, 2004.
Prats, Armando JosŽ. Invisible Natives: Myth and Identity in the American
Western. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2002.
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Winkler, Martin M. “Homer’s Iliad and John Ford’s The Searchers.” The
Searchers. Essays and Reflections on John Ford’s Classic Western. Ed.
Arthur M. Eckstein & Peter R. Lehman. Detroit: Wayne State
University Press, 2004. 145–170.
Young, Robert J.C. Colonial Desire: Hybridity in Theory, Culture and Race.
London & New York: Routledge, 1995.
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