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"Who Killed the World": Building a Feminist Utopia from the Ashes of Toxic Masculinity in Mad Max: Fury Road

Taylor Boulware
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1
TLDR
The Mad Max: Fury Road series as mentioned in this paper explores the film's utopian response to the dystopian realities of capitalist patriarchy, arguing that the film rewrites masculinity for a post-capitalist, post-patriarchal world.
Abstract
The contemporary post-apocalypse film is utopian in its various promises for recovery from the destruction caused by the end of days, and perhaps none more so than George Miller’s 2015 installment of his genre-defining Mad Max saga, Fury Road , featuring Tom Hardy as the titular character and Charlize Theron as Imperator Furiosa, the female warrior who goes rogue to save the women held as sex slaves (“prize breeders”) by the monstrous tyrant Immortan Joe. Lauded by audiences, particularly female audiences, for its feminist revisions to the one of the most aggressively masculine popular film genres – and enraging “men’s rights activists,” a sure sign of doing something right – Fury Road , and in particular Theron’s Furiosa, have become icons of twenty-first century feminist empowerment. The film is utopian not in the sense that it presents an ideal world, but that it imagines successful liberatory revolution and the destruction of decrepit systems of oppression, out of which a more perfect, egalitarian world can then emerge. Through the grotesque, parasitic tyranny of Immortan Joe’s monstrous necropolitics that reduces subjects to mere bodies for the deathly reproduction of the decaying corpse of capitalism, the film exposes the inextricable links between traditional masculinity, patriarchy, and capitalist exploitation. It reveals how these ideologies work in toxic complicity in order to name, regulate, discipline, and render subjects, in the parlance of the film, ‘half-life;’ in the words of political theorist Achille Mbembe, this exercise of power serves to create “ death-worlds , new and unique forms of social existence in which vast populations are subjected to conditions of life conferring upon them the status of living dead .” This paper explores the film’s utopian response to the dystopian realities of capitalist patriarchy, arguing that Mad Max: Fury Road rewrites masculinity for a post-capitalist, post-patriarchal world.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Rehabilitating Hegemonic Masculinity With the Bodies of Aging Action Heroes

Kelvin Ke
TL;DR: The aging action hero has become an important figure in post-millennial action cinema as mentioned in this paper, and the aging male body is significant because they provide an opportunity to rehabilitate the tropes of hegemonic masculinity and the indestructible male body.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distopías climáticas en el cine contemporáneo: Ecofeminismo para salvar el mundo en Mad Max: Furia en la carretera

Marta Marín
TL;DR: Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller, 2015) not only offers us a renewed example of this type of cinema, but a real solution to the current problem that is affecting us as mentioned in this paper.

Victim-Warriors and Restorers—Heroines in the Post-Apocalyptic World of Mad Max: Fury Road

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the evolving image of female characters in the Mad Max saga directed by George Miller, focusing on Furiosa's rebellion in the last film, Mad Max: Fury Road.