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When one thinks of the archetypical hero versus villain in the world of comics, Batman and The Joker often come to mind. They connect to the concept of the eternal battle between oppositions. Choosing a side, however, is relative. Heroes can look like villains through the eyes of a hero’s villain. It is an argument that The Joker uses to challenge Batman, in Arkham Asylum. He is tricked into accepting The Joker’s invitation to the Feast of Fools, which was a theatrical event that dates as far back as the Middle Ages. Its contents usually revolved around social and moral criticisms of their time. The fact that an accusation full of reason comes from the mouth of a madman, is an attempt to obscure its contents through comical absurdity. According to Foucault, by the end of the Middle Ages, European literature had stigmatized the madman as a satirical figure by attributing to him the lack of reason to the rest of his repertoire, which consisted of poverty, crime, and ugliness. By reducing the rejects of society to the point of comical absurdity, it often helped reinforce the position of reason, but sometimes it backfires. The absurd claim of the insane is actually a useful tool in philosophical logic. A reductio ad absurdum is a process of refutation on grounds that an absurdity will follow the entailment if we were to accept a certain claim. Morrison claims that Batman would only be mentally unstable if he did not wear a costume and channeled his pain through violence, but so does The Joker, and he is labeled insane. The whole structure rests on the hidden premise that the rich are superior to the poor, who are monsterized like the fool is ridiculed. Nietzsche himself thought that if a person was ugly, they were automatically also criminals. What a reader is subjected to, in the Batverse, is a class warfare between the rich and the poor, authority and the whistleblower, or the wolves and the sheep. There is a tacit agreement at play, and it is The Joker who engages the reader to question that agreement.
2017
When the Joker first appeared in the pages of Batman on April 25, 1940, he was intended to be little more than a throwaway villain for the hero to face. Since his debut, the Joker has appeared in countless comics, TV shows, and movies. He has become a cultural icon unlike any other and is recognized around the world. The Joker has been studied through the lens of psychology, and has been used as an example of evil, villainy, and moral bankruptcy. The complexity of this comic book villain is unparalleled by even his closest villainous analog. This thesis examines the Joker through various lenses. The Joker’s existence creates an antagonistic binary in which he mirrors his heroic counterpart. This mirroring between good and evil, hero and villain, has ancient roots the combat myth; pitting the monster against the God-like hero in a repeating cycle of life and death. As a comic book villain, the Joker exceeds our definition of villainy and can only be categorized as the supervillain. T...
Al-Lisan : Jurnal Bahasa, 2022
A. INTRODUCTION Joker, directed by Todd Phillips, is one film that delivers a great message to the audience. The dark story of the Joker, the evil clown from Gotham City, succeeds in attracting the world's attention, including Indonesia. Joker has become a trending topic on all social media portals since the release date. Sad, tragic, and deep madness are three things that the audiences can see in almost every part of this movie. The story of Joker becomes the beginning of chaos in Gotham City. It explains who the Joker is, how Arthur Fleck becomes Joker, and how he presents Batman's eternal enemy in Gotham. If in the previous DC movies, the audiences were always served by Gotham as a city that was destroyed and failed, here the audiences will see how it all started. The Joker is a crazy villain, Bruce Wayne or Batman as a hero of the story is much more lovable, but by releasing this film, Todd Phillips tries to bring us to stand in Joker's perception. Literary work studies discussed the psychological aspects of Joker had been focused on the types of personality disorders and the causes of Joker's experiences with a personality disorder. As (Rahman, 2020) used Theodore Millon's theory to analyze Arthur Fleck's characterization and showed that Arthur has several personality disorders. Psychological and environmental factors trigger personality disorder in Arthur's character. The five types of personality disorder experienced by Arthur are borderline personality disorder, depressive personality disorder, sadistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and negativistic personality disorder. Another was (Permatasari, 2020), who explored the characteristics of Joker by using Altruism and Altruistic Love theory by focusing on Fleck as the main character. His characteristics have dramatically changed through tragically unpleasant experiences he passed on from a kind-hearted person and became a cruel and impulsive man as he has been disappointed by his mother who lied to him, backstabbed by his friend, and got bullied for his mental condition. s. even though he is depicted as a cruel and impulsive person, Arthur still has altruistic sides. His altruistic side appears in terms of sincerity and solidarity aspects. He didn't kill his friend, Gary, and set him free as he thought that Gary never treated him bad, betrayed him, and was always nice to him. Fitriani (2019) analyzed the main characters in the movie "Joker" by Todd Phillips. This research used the theory of the psychological aspect is based on Sigmund Freud's
2021
Joker-The Archetypal Villain of Modernity One villain with incredible contemporary significance and popularity is Joker from the DC cinematic universe. There are several aspects to the character of Joker that are intriguing such as his rise to infamy and mischief which begins with his troubled childhood and mental illness. In the recent film adaptation Joker directed by Todd Phillips produced in 2019, viewers learn about his background and environmental context that preceded his career as a villain and arch-nemesis of Batman. He is regarded as a cultural icon in today's society and has raised many questions about the disenfranchised products of disturbed households and trauma. The Joker is the classic madman or person driven crazy by dire circumstances in which one is led to believe that they are insignificant and worthless. The social-psychological forces that drive Joker are understood by modern society and are vivid aspects of many of the places that people grow up in this current era. In this increasingly unjust world ridden with corruption and oppression, the Joker serves as the quintessential marginalized individual yearning for revenge, representing humanity's inner madness and desire for change. This reflects deeply on American society especially in the recent decades with generations of people bottling up emotions of anger and frustration over the institutions that were designed to serve them. Time and again these underclass segments of the population release their fury upon society in a fit of rage desiring for revolution and change. The "Occupy Wall Street" movement from a decade ago is a jarring
2015
In this, my research master thesis, I looked at laughter as a form of resistance in Alan Moore and Brian Bolland's The Killing Joke, Tim Burton's Batman and Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. The aim is to analyze if the Joker's most famous characteristic, his continuous laughter, can be seen as a form of resistance in itself. Following two laughing theorists, Nietzsche and Foucault, this work analyzes the laughter and the madness of the Joker in three of its most famous incarnations.
Acta Neurologica Belgica, 2020
In the psychological thriller film Joker, released in 2019 and starring Joaquin Phoenix in the first role, another possible origin story for this iconic character is reported. Above all, it brings us medical elements for the understanding of the development of this complex character. Contrary to other interpretations, we discover a lonely, timid and uncharismatic man (Arthur Fleck). He seems to be suffering from psychobehavioral disorders and seems depressed. There is a strangeness in his behavior along with social withdrawal. He suffers from fits of laughter that occur at socially inappropriate times. He also suffers from psychotic symptoms with visual delusions. We learn through the film that he was a beaten child, psychologically and physically abused with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). The uncontrollable outbursts of laughter, behavioral and psychotic disorders followed these elements. As a neurologist, I was intrigued by these symptoms. I have explored the neuropsychiatri...
Folklore Forum, 1984
PLAYING THE JOKER: PERSONAL BIOGRAPHY AND ATTITUDES IN THE STUDY OF JOKE PERFORMANCE Regina Bendix ... He felt himself placed in the role of a joker, though he estimates his joke delivery back home to be "okay, but average, nothing great, nothing drastic. ...
COMMICAST, 2021
The Joker film aired in Indonesia on October 2, 2019. This film was widely discussed by the audience and succeeded in bringing the audience into the atmosphere of the film. This is because the problems that are taken often occur in the life of the general public. This film tells the story of Arthur aka Joker, whose life is filled with sadness, cheating, injustice as a lower middle-class citizen so that he is treated inappropriately by society and his family. Everything that happened to him resulted in the victim becoming the perpetrator of violence. Researchers are interested in analyzing the Joker film more deeply, and this is because the shows in the film contain violence that can trigger various physical and mental conditions such as aggressive behaviour, violent behaviour, bullying, fear, depression and nightmares for those who watch it. The purpose of this research is to find out how the representation of violence in the Joker film viewed from the Semiotics of Roland Barths to ...
New Numbers and Letters , 2020
Alienation, in social theory signifies a state of estrangement or separation from one's milieu, work, products of work, or self. The idea of alienation remains equivocal and nebulous despite its popularity in contemporary life. The elusive nature of the word is in a way its quintessence. Alienation is also characterised by powerlessness, the feeling that one's destiny is beyond one's control and is determined by external agents, luck or fate. It also signifies meaninglessness, the inability to comprehend certain actions, circumstances or a generalized sense of purposelessness in life. Alienation could, at times, masquerade as anomie or normlessness, the lack of trust in or commitment to established norms and conventions, the naturalised and irrefragable status quo of the society. Alienation, in this sense, may give rise to deviant behaviour and immoderate competition. Alienation is also a kind of social isolation or a kind of self-imposed estrangement, perhaps the most ineffable and impenetrable of its myriad facets. Todd Phillips' Joker could be considered as the quintessential alienated hero of the 20 th century. The eponymous protagonist of the movie Joker (2019) is a failed stand-up comedian and a clown who turns to a life of crime and chaos in the fictional Gotham city. In Arthur Fleck, (the real name of our hero) we find an amalgam of many, if not all the characteristics of alienation. Fleck seems at a loss when it comes to identifying a purpose in life. He doesn't seem to comprehend the tortuous world and the part he is expected to play in it. In real life and in his life as a clown, his roles are way beyond his ken. One wouldn't say that his alienation is a Marxian alienation, but that doesn't mean that we should rule out the rubric completely. Fleck's alienation, towards the end of the movie, transmogrifies into a kind of anomie, a word which derives from the Greek word anomia meaning lawlessness and which
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