The Frame

from the pen of Jandy Stone

Archives for the ‘Articles’ Category

I Walked With a Zombie: A Liminal (Post)colonial Text

By Jandy • May 1st, 2008 • Category: Articles, Film

A postcolonial reading of I Walked With a Zombie as a reimagining of Jane Eyre set in the West Indies, and the ways in which the film interrogates colonial domination, but mostly reinscribes stereotypically racist views.



Unexpected Expecting: A Structural Analysis of 2007’s Unplanned Pregnancy Films

By Jandy • Mar 29th, 2008 • Category: Articles, Film

In 2007, no fewer than four films dealing with unplanned pregnancy were released: Knocked Up, Waitress, Juno, and 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days. Would a structural analysis of these films reveal a similarity between the films due to their subjects that transcends other generic considerations, or would the pregnancy plot turn out to be subordinate to the intersecting genres and national origins?



Reaching Toward Postmodernism

By Jandy • Aug 17th, 2007 • Category: Articles, Literature

Postmodernism is often seen as a rejection of the totalizing project of modernism and of the Enlightenment; however, literary modernism as exemplified in the works of Virginia Woolf, Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, and others, are as skeptical of the Enlightenment project as postmodernism. This article argues that postmodernism continues to be concerned with the same issues as literary modernism, but simply takes the issues further.



From Austen to Bollywood: Adapting Tradition in Gurinder Chada’s Bride and Prejudice

By Jandy • Aug 17th, 2007 • Category: Articles, Film, Literature

Gurinder Chadha’s Bride and Prejudice is not only a modern, cross-cultural version of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice; it also adapts Bollywood musical traditions to create a film that embodies its message of multicultural understanding in its very form.



Racial Leftist Politics in the Poetry of Langston Hughes

By Jandy • Aug 17th, 2007 • Category: Articles, Literature

In the early 1930s, Langston Hughes flirted with Communism, as his poetry from the time period makes clear. However, he never lost sight of his own people and his poetry reflects his desire to unite the plight of the African-American with that of the oppressed worker throughout the world in hopes of a better life for all.