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Liquid visuality: Douglas Sirk's La Habanera and insular Atlantic studies.

Hernández Adrián, Francisco-J.

Authors



Abstract

In Douglas Sirk's last UFA studios film, La Habanera (1937), the island of Tenerife poses as Puerto Rico, Caribbean culture translates as vague Hispanic pastiche, and Nazi propaganda speaks through Zarah Leander's trance performances in the course of the Spanish Civil War. Taking Sirk's singularly perverse visual text as a starting point, this article addresses the function of island spaces in Nazi melodrama, and explores how gendered bodies and family arrangements figure at critical moments in ideologically charged representations of insular Atlantic environments. The film's strategic inscription of insular stereotypes comments on fantasies of the defunct Spanish Empire and on the besieged Second Spanish Republic, as an indirect means of reflecting on colonialist desires in Nazi Germany.

Citation

Hernández Adrián, F. (2014). Liquid visuality: Douglas Sirk's La Habanera and insular Atlantic studies. Journal of Romance Studies, 14(2), 62-77. https://doi.org/10.3828/jrs.14.2.62

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 1, 2014
Online Publication Date Jun 30, 2014
Publication Date 2014-06
Deposit Date Oct 9, 2014
Journal Journal of Romance Studies
Print ISSN 1473-3536
Electronic ISSN 1752-2331
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 14
Issue 2
Pages 62-77
DOI https://doi.org/10.3828/jrs.14.2.62