Free Trade Comedy: Slapstick Toggling in Global Supply Chains « Post45
1/22/20, 9(34 PM
Post45
Issue 4: Political Reaction and the
Politics of Slapstick
Free Trade Comedy:
Slapstick Toggling in Global
Supply Chains
Joseph Jonghyun Jeon
01.22.20
e should note from the outset that slapstick is named not after the genre from which it
originally derives but from that genre's defining prop. Although most often associated
with Hollywood silent films from 1910s to the 30s — in which kinesthetic geniuses like
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd made careers of elegant pratfalls, cheeky
brawls, and frantic chases — the genre originated in the live performances of Italian Comedia
dell'Arte, in which the original slapstick was an actual device that made a loud crack when a
performer was hit. 1 A weapon of a kind that appealed to primal pleasures, it was designed to
imply pain that was not actually felt. Accordingly, slapstick remains a visual strategy for
simultaneously displaying and mitigating violence. The appeal of this classically lowbrow humor
has persisted in popular entertainment: from these Italian roots, through the traveling vaudeville
performances of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, through Hollywood and, as I will
explore in this article, in moviemaking late in the age of globalization.
W
Slapstick's popular appeal seems to have something to with the communal function of its
ritualized form. 2 For Georges Bataille (citing Chaplin's 1925 film, The Gold Rush, though not the
term itself), the laughter prompted by slapstick comedy affords a divine experience of feeling
exempt from anguish and a joy of communication among laughers 3 Bataille here echoes an
element of Walter Benjamin's characterization of such laughter, also with Chaplin in mind, as a
therapeutic amelioration for the challenges of modern technological change. 4 Bataille skirts
some of the most conflicted aspects of Benjamin's vision by linking this communal laughter to a
key element of his philosophy, namely ritualized sacrifice, which he characterizes as a
"passionate release" that serves "to liberate violence while marking off the domain in which
violence reign absolutely." 5 The victim of violence in Bataille's containment strategy is given
over to destruction in order to save the community at large from ruination. 6
At stake for Benjamin in slapstick was something more vexed and ultimately more radical than
containment or therapy — as it was as well for Henri Bergson in his own landmark essay on the
topic — namely the unresolved tension in modern comedy between the liberatory potential of
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machines and their contrary tendency to foreclose freedom. 7 Although it seems to stem from
Benjamin's analysis, Bataille's instrumental vision of slapstick humor dispenses with the
antinomic nature of Benjamin's thought. As Miriam Hansen so carefully chronicled, Benjamin's
formulation of American slapstick comedy (and of early Disney films) was part of a desperate
gamble to locate in modern technology the possibility of a fate other than "the alienation of the
senses that abets the deadly violence of imperialist warfare and fascism" for which this
technology had already been appropriated. 8 Benjamin was indeed horrified by this capacity in
modern technology, but hoped that within "the linkage of laughter and violence with the
sadomasochistic slant of spectatorial pleasure" that characterized such popular forms, he might
also find "alternative visions of technology and the body, prefiguring a utopian mobilization of
the 'collective physis' and a different organization of the relations between humans and their
environment." 9 Unlike Bataille's cruelly pragmatic collectivity, then, slapstick for Benjamin
offered the utopian possibility of the reorganization of social relations outside of fascist
teleology by rehearsing violence as pleasurable spectacle. Hansen points out that this was
theory conceived under great duress in the late 1930s, with Adorno's disapproval making clear
the extent to which Benjamin's gambit risked valorizing the very ruthless powers that had come
to determine the meanings of modern technologies. Nevertheless, "by activating individually
based mass-psychotic tendencies in the space of collective sensory experience and, above all, in
the mode of play," Benjamin hoped that slapstick and its collective laughter "might prevent them
from being acted out in reality, in the form of organized mob violence, genocidal persecution, or
war." 10
Benjamin's antinomic reading of slapstick also offers a crucial understanding of the genre as it
moves temporally through history into the present and spatially as it becomes a global generic
form. Benjamin understood that slapstick's mitigation of violence always simultaneously
preserves the violence it is meant to relieve, along with the fascist potentiality it might diminish.
While funny, slapstick is also distressing, demonstrating a subject's vulnerability to harm in the
same breath that it proposes to solve it. It mimics the systemic hostility that it works to undo
with revolutionary reversal. According to Hansen, Benjamin believed that the "alienation of the
senses that abets the deadly violence of imperialist warfare and fascism can be undone only in
the realm of technology itself, by means of new media of reproduction that allow for a collective
and playful (that is, nonfatal) innervation." 11 The innervation proposed here, a "mode of
adaptation, assimilation, and incorporation of something external and alien to the subject," 12
contrasts with Freudian introjection. Neurophysical rather than psychological, innervation is
more mechanical, allowing for an instrumental view of the kind of internalization it describes.
Accordingly, comic characters, such as those that Benjamin wrote about in Molière, pose less
"the inner life of man understood empirically" and more "the brilliance of a single trait, which
allows no other to remain visible in its proximity." 13 In the case of slapstick, the singular comic
trait, particularly in the Chaplin model that Benjamin had in mind, most always highlights a
relation between violence and technology that the comic performance, in toggling between
them, emphasizes — both the fact of their relation, and also the ease with which slapstick pivots
in both directions, between the cruelty of machines and the release of humor.
In toggling, I mean to invoke not only the specifically mechanical sense of switching between
different modes implied in, say, computing but also the antinomic quality that Benjamin ascribed
to Chaplin. Slapstick's utility as a critical tool inheres precisely in this toggling quality, which
allows both the visualization of persistent historical violence as well as means to seek distance
from it. Encompassing both sides of the comedy/tragedy dyad, slapstick suspends a predetermined moment in which one might sense manifold possibilities before their foreclosure.
Benjamin understood that the interwar industrial period was particularly salient for viewing the
alignment between modern advancement and fascist catastrophe when, as Horkheimer and
Adorno famously put it in 1944, "the wholly enlightened earth [was] radiant with triumphant
calamity." 14
Slapstick became relevant in this historical context because it called attention to the capacity of
genre to realize past forms into present contexts. Theodore Martin has suggested the "double
life" of genres as both historical and contemporary: that is, they "explain how aesthetic and
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cultural categories become recognizable as well as reproducible in a given moment" and at the
same time "demonstrate how the conventions and expectations that make up those categories
are sedimented over time," and in so doing, they offer "a set of shared conventions for
categorizing our otherwise disorienting experiences of the present." 15 Benjamin's account of
slapstick isolates the dynamic interaction between past and present as a paradigmatic
transitional moment in the broader historical morphology of genres. Hansen points out that that
Benjamin turned not to the classical cinema of the immediate period but to the comedies of the
previous decade (Chaplin and early Disney films) in order to locate an aporia for the critical
historicism that staged the terms of the present crisis in a manner that left open an alternative
revolutionary possibility. 16 Perhaps due to its inevitably primal quality, slapstick humor always
seems both of and prior to the present, whenever that may be. Because of its toggling quality,
slapstick self-reflexively foregrounds genre's double life in the manner that Julie Orlemanski has
ascribed to metaforms, which "illuminate certain facets of what they encompass, connecting
these highlighted features in a complex and never fully articulable web of relations." 17 In what
seems a protracted moment at which aesthetic practices seem to hem and haw before a
crossroad, historical relations become more legible.
This toggling between past and present also highlights slapstick's historical utility in dilating
specifically on technological innovation. We recall this feature most famously Chaplin's Modern
Times (1936), in which slapstick technique comically foregrounds and troubles the kind of
coordination that industrial modernity demands of the human body. At the same time, filmic
slapstick represents not so much the movie magic of special effects but an older tradition of
trickery based on bodily movement and coordination. And so, even when slapstick methods have
been deployed in not specifically industrial contexts, they have always emphasized precision in
timing and delivery, remaining true to the origin of the genre in a stage prop. Especially as
contemporary filmmaking comes to rely more on CGI technology to dazzle its audiences with
spectacles of mechanized action, slapstick atavistically draws attention to the performer's
physical relation to the prop itself. As a result, slapstick remains useful for thinking about
machinery at human scale, both in the sense of literal technology and in the more metaphoric
register of the systemic machinery that drives different iterations of capitalist accumulation.
Under this final rubric, we turn now toward the afterlife of slapstick in the context of western
deindustrialization and the globalization of production and distribution networks that results.
Here, the just-in-time comedy of slapstick technique, which emphasizes orchestration and coordination comes to meet the Just-In-Time (JIT) logics of contemporary containerization and
world supply chains, 18 in which, as Lucy Hunter and L. Ryan put it, "it doesn't matter where
parts are put together, it matters when." 19 Placing this more contemporary context alongside
Benjamin's historical moment, we see a scalar expansion of Benjamin's logic and the general
utility of slapstick toggling as a critical tool to investigate systemic crisis. Whereas industrial
slapstick grappled with the machine itself as synecdoche for industrial systems and Fordist
logics, postindustrial slapstick grapples with the more abstract machinery that constitute global
circulation systems. Our transhistorical juxtaposition recalls Benjamin's strategy at his troubled
historical juncture: to reach back to the recent (and not distant) past for an aesthetic practice
that suspended the moment before its determination by holding out the possibility of laughter
against that of violence. 20
The relevant crisis here is the collapse of the Washington Consensus global liberal world order,
which was most clearly epitomized by the failure of the Transpacific Partnership (TPP) trade
alliance in 2017, when the Trump administration formally withdrew the U.S. from the
negotiations that it had been leading since the Obama administration. Here, the semiperipheral
perspective of South Korea offers a paradigmatic picture of global trade anxieties of the
period. 21 Beginning in the second decade of the 21st century, South Korea began to face the
growing contradiction between its economic interests, increasingly tied to China, and its
security alliances with the U.S. The high stakes of this conflicted position became painfully clear
in 2016 during the controversy over the South Korean decision to deploy the Terminal High
Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), a U.S. missile defense system, on the Korean peninsula to
protect the nation from the burgeoning North Korean nuclear weapons program. In an episode
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that resonated with the U.S. Cuban missile crisis in 1962, China expressed its displeasure about
having U.S. missile technology so close to its border by quickly imposing a series of economic
sanctions on Korean products that threatened the Korean economy to the tune of $15 billion,
potentially reducing Korean GDP growth by 20% in 2017. 22 While this military context is outside
the purview of this article, it reminds us of the more direct forms of violent conflict that lurk
behind trade conflicts.
The more important point here is that, as an export-dependent nation in a historical moment in
which the largest economies have increasingly ducked behind their large domestic markets with
more protectionist strategies, South Korea found itself having to manage a high-stakes
improvisation under uncertain conditions, in which once dependable markets and trading
partners suddenly became unreliable and new growth opportunities came with considerable
costs. In this respect, South Korea occupied a position in this new world order that becomes
paradigmatic not only for the many export-dependent nations that enjoyed stability under
Washington Consensus protocols but also for large corporate entities like Hollywood motion
picture studios and the U.S.'s National Basketball Association (NBA), both of which have been
forced to weigh significant compromises in order to realize growth markets in Asia (mostly in
China). These state and non-state actors have had to engage in a kind of slapstick toggling, adlibbing economic relations in an unstable environment while fending off the many dangers and
pitfalls that attend such a tenuous strategy. US depression-era slapstick logics in the
Benjaminian mode thus become useful for thinking about this post-Washington Consensus
world order, a transitional moment when economies like that of South Korea, having built
according to a globalized blueprint for decades (for better or for worse), suddenly had the rug
pulled out from under them.
Economists have historically justified free trade agreements using David Ricardo's notion of
comparative advantage, which argues that international trade "expands a nation's consumption
possibilities frontier even if it has an absolute productivity advantage in producing every
good." 23 But as critics have pointed out, such logic requires perfect competition, free of the
"monopolies, oligopolies, cartels, state-trading enterprises, and parastatal organizations" that
dominate contemporary global commerce. 24 Throughout the Washington Consensus era of free
trade, particularly after the establishment of the World Trade Organization in 1995, the nature of
trade agreements has changed considerably from their initial focus on lowering high postwar
tariffs to a more recent attention on pressing the advantages of multinational corporations by
strengthening international regulatory standards in rent-seeking ventures and decreasing
flexibility in cross border capital flows. 25 Notwithstanding the persistence of sanguine 1990s
rhetoric about free trade's salutary benefits, a profound imbalance currently determines
interstate trade relations. As Anwar Shaik has pointed out, the results are already encoded in the
rules of the game, and are just as determined as the fates of stock characters in Comedia
dell'Arte, in which the young, wealthy hero would wield the slapstick to punish the old, poor fool:
"Simply opening up the markets of a developing country exposes its businesses to powerful
international competition, whether or not they are internationally competitive. And if they are
not, they will lose out on a large scale." 26
In the South Korean films discussed below — Veteran (Beterang, 2015), Psychokinesis (Yŏmnyŏk,
2018), and a pair of otherwise unrelated movies both entitled (though they are slightly differently
in Korean), El Condor Pasa (K'ondurŭn naraganda, 2012;, El kkondorŭ ppasa, 2016) — slapstick
toggles between violence and humor, alternately acknowledging and obscuring this basic fact.
All of these films deploy slapstick conventions in this historical context as part of a broader
attempt to grapple with the stakes of the global realignments that become necessary after the
end of the Washington Consensus. None of these films are primarily slapstick comedies, but
three of the four deploy the generic language of slapstick to produce comedic effects, while the
fourth offers an illustrative counterpoint. 27 In most global cinemas, slapstick has become less a
discrete genre and more a filmic lexicon of generic stunts, gestures, and techniques that blends
with local traditions of folk humor and is worked into other genres, which in turn become more
hybridic. Veteran, for example, is an action comedy. Within this frame, these films deploy
slapstick features to mimic the hostilities of a free trade system that purports to form more
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salutary global communities, and thus slapstick paradoxically reveals the violence that it intends
to mitigate. If it proposes to render violence inconsequential, it also exposes the violence that
inheres in seemingly inconsequential activities. But whereas Veteran and Psychokinesis use
slapstick in a more or less Bataillian fashion — in order to consolidate nationalist sentiments and
to adjudicate the villains that would prevent a more harmonious system of free trade (chaebol,
China) — the El Condor Pasa films, in different ways, realize a Benjaminian antinomic vision that
emerges when logistics becomes a mode of redemption.
Just-in-time Humor
Part of the appeal of the 2015 CJ Entertainment hit, Veteran, was its generic mashup of police
thriller and comedic conventions. The film topped the Korean box office that year ahead of the
historical drama Assassination (Amsal) and even the Marvel extravaganza partially shot in Seoul,
The Avengers: The Age of Ultron. Its success was owed partly to its use of a slapstick mode. The
film begins with a sting operation in which undercover police officers bait a group of car thieves
into revealing their base of operations, an auto paint shop, where a comic fight ensues. Slapstick
elements in Veteran are faithful to generic tradition: the hero's wily fighting style produces
laughs more than bruises. Though short on the choreographic genius of Jackie Chan, the fight
owes a debt to the Hong Kong martial artist's style of quirky combat, in which acrobatics are
punctuated by clever improvisations weaponizing ordinary objects on hand, sophomoric stunts
ending in groin injuries, and funny ironies where a fool injures himself in a fight that moves too
fast for his capacity to follow (Fig. 1). 28 Chan's innovation in 1970s Hong Kong filmmaking was
his realization of the possibility for humor already implicit in the Kung Fu action film — that is,
the absurdities of staged violence that, however balletic, were ultimately faked. Ackbar Abbas
links this comedic turn, a far cry from Bruce Lee's avenging angel, to "the relaxation of colonial
tensions" in the period that lasted until Thatcher's visit to Hong Kong in 1982, an optimistic
period when colonialism seemed more a cause for laughter than consternation — "no more than
a formal administrative presence that did not interfere with the real life of the colony." 29 We
might add here that the protests and violence that re-emerged in Hong Kong during the
Umbrella Movement in 2014 and the Anti-Extradition Law Protests in 2019 revealed that the
violence was not so much dissipated by comedy but held in abeyance.
Fig. 1. Slapstick fight in Veteran (2015).
In the manner of Chan, slapstick in Veteran manifests Detective Seo's easy charisma, offering
comic relief from the villain, Cho Tae-oh (Yoo Ah-in), the maniacal scion of the Sinjin Group, a
family-run chaebol (large Korean conglomerate). In 2015, Hwang Jung-min, the actor who plays
Detective Seo, was fresh off of his performance in Ode to My Father (Gukjesijang, 2014) as a
Forrest Gump-like nationalist everyman who is co-incidentally present at all the major events in
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modern Korean history. Ode to My Father, like Veteran, thrived at the box office, giving Hwang a
pair of hits in consecutive years. Despite the generic difference, a populist line runs through
these performances. 30 A hero for the masses, Detective Seo is principled and jocular whereas
the villain Cho is violent and humorless. Slapstick thus registers class difference as
temperament, marking the difference between everyone else and the world of the Sinjin Group,
in which Cho is a high-placed executive vying for power against his siblings as the elderly
Chairman faces other challenges. The chaebol son is not in on the joke.
In this vein, slapstick in Veteran becomes a means to stage the problem of jurisdiction that
troubles communal formation, specifically the problem of elites who evade legal restraint and
lack concern for the greater good. Their wealth seems to offer reprieve from the kind of
adjudication that governs everyone else in the film (including Detective Seo's family) who
struggles with the financial demands of daily life. More specifically, Veteran is concerned with
the fate of a truck driver named Bae (Jung Woong-in), who brings his complaint to the Sinjin
Group when a subcontractor fails to pay him. 31 Bae is humiliated at the corporate offices,
where he ostensibly attempts suicide (with no witnesses) and falls into a coma. Having
befriended this truck driver through the opening case in the film, Detective Seo risks his own
career to investigate, against the orders of higher ups who are under the influence of the
powerful corporation and insist that this is not his case to investigate (i.e. out of his jurisdiction).
Accordingly, until its very last moments, the final showdown between Seo and Cho at the end of
the film is not comedic, proceeding according to the violent predilections of Cho (a masochistic
mixed-martial arts fanatic) rather than Seo's irreverent shtick. It is only when a thoroughly
defeated Seo returns to slapstick, handcuffing Cho to himself as he lies exhausted on the ground
that the tide turns. Crucially, at this precise moment, Seo laughs; and it is by making Cho the
butt of the joke that the outcome of the fight, and of the film in general, is secured. Just as the
slapstick maneuver pulls Cho back into the jurisdiction of comedy, Seo's ultimate victory
succeeds in preventing him from fleeing to Singapore where he would be able to evade the
reach of Korean law and in valorizing the community from which Cho would otherwise purchase
exemption.
By invoking Singapore, a global financial hub, the film gestures toward another relevant
characteristic of slapstick — its supralinguistic ability to form transnational communities of
laughers. Put simply, slapstick translates. In Veteran, this transnational quality doesn't obviate
the kind of national sovereignty that Detective Seo manages to secure at the end of the film, but
rather expands its scale to broader accords. Like much of Korean cinema in the decade in which
the Transpacific Partnership emerged as a potential elixir for declining global growth under
waning U.S. hegemony, Veteran is self-consciously concerned with South Korea's economic
options in the devolving world system late in this globalist cycle. The TPP's final effort to
preserve a global economic order under U.S. leadership and to establish a bulwark against
China's bid for a new world order officially ended when the U.S. withdrew from negotiations,
leaving subimperial nations like South Korea in the lurch. 32 Veteran reflects this crisis of
globalization. The opening police operation about car theft in the movie, we learn, is actually
part of an illegal export operation, in which Korean criminals conspire with Russian
counterparts to ship stolen luxury cars abroad. The investigation culminates in a confrontation
between cops and robbers, appropriately then, in a Busan logistics hub — a shipping container
facility where the cargo is being prepared for transport. There the police team wait for the
illegal transnational transaction to occur and leap into action once it is complete, leading to a
comic chase through a nearby labyrinth formed by shipping containers.
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Fig. 2. Circulatory chase in Veteran (2015).
Through what we might term a circulatory chase, this scene weds slapstick conventions to the
circulatory demands of free trade in the literal milieu of global commerce, invoking what Joshua
Clover terms a "circulation struggle." 33 Here, massively-scaled distribution serves as
increasingly desperate compensation for declining industrial production in formerly
developmentalist economies at a moment when the certainty of that trade begins to unravel
(Fig. 2). 34 The dramatic shipping yard scene in the era of containerization has been something
of staple in Hollywood film iconography at least since Warner Brothers' Lethal Weapon 2 (1989),
which ends at the Port of Los Angeles with a confrontation between the detective heroes and
the apartheid-era Afrikaners attempting to ship millions of dollars of drug money out of the
country by freight. The plot device was later refashioned as a red herring in the 20th Century
Fox blockbuster Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995), in which the villain blows up a tanker ship
supposedly with $140 billion in gold bullion on board, feigning a radical act intended to
destabilize the global economy in order to hide his actual theft. 35 But if both of these are films
that express Washington Consensus anxiety about capital flight in a globalizing economy, then
Veteran perhaps owes more to a scene in the 2011 film, Hanna, in which the title character is
chased through a container park with the industrial electronica of The Chemical Brothers
serving as a soundtrack. By situating physical struggles in this mise-en- scène, both scenes
figure slightly later economic anxieties than is expressed in the two previous Hollywood
examples, in which earlier fears of trade imbalances and improprieties modulate into fears of
trade no more.
Veteran's circulatory chase dramatizes growing doubts about the sustainability of massive
logistics enterprises, doubts which became fully realized in the failure of Hanjin Shipping in
2016, just a year after Veteran's theatrical release, when dozens of uncapitalized ships were left
to drift at sea as the company suddenly went into receivership, the ports refusing entry to
vessels (some called them ghost ships) incapable of paying their fees. 36 Until such catastrophic
breaking points, the driving ethos of these logistics operations has been to to proceed with
blinders on. The frenetic nature of Veteran's circulatory chase, here in comic form, encapsulates
the imperative toward keeping the system running. Like slapstick with its just-in-time humor, 37
logistics operations in this context attempt to defeat contingency with performances of
technological coordination. Owing a debt to Hollywood silent comedies, this particular iteration
departs from the scene of production famously epitomized in Chaplin's Modern Times. In
Chaplin, as Michael North glosses, "the comedian needs to become part of the machine in order
to extract its comic possibilities, meeting its movements with acrobatic skill, matching its splitsecond timing with his own" in the context of industrial production. 38 In the circulatory chase,
comedic skills instead become deployed to meet the needs of distribution in an aesthetics that
mimics the global supply chain. A more chaotic version of the heist narrative, slapstick in this
scene reflects the way in which logistics operations always occur at their limit point, always
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threatening to succumb to unruly entropy, producing, to borrow Jennifer Fay's description of
weather in Buster Keaton, "a simulated environment that is most virtuosic in its unworking." 39
Detective Seo gets wedged in between two containers, but nevertheless continues to fight a
Russian criminal. The hilariously violent Miss Bong (Jang Yoon-shin), the only woman on the
squad, mistimes a dive at a fleeing perp and knocks herself unconscious. Team leader Oh (Oh
Dal-su) pulls up alongside another running criminal and casually convinces him that it would
just be easier for him to stop running and get in the van. It's a funny scene.
But it is also a fleeting scene in a film that ultimately seems unwilling to embrace its full
slapstick potential. In this respect, it clings to the pragmatism of Bataille more than the
antinomic utopianism of Benjamin. That is to say, the film ultimately wishes to preserve the
system it makes the object of its humor. This is not a critical slapstick that questions the heart of
the global free trade enterprise but rather a call for measured restraint. So, while the film's final
showdown between Detective Seo and Cho exhibits slapstick populism, in which working-class
virtue triumphs over elitist pathology, the effort is less to incite more general class conflict and
more to advocate for better stewardship over corporate endeavors. The fight after all takes
place in Myeong-dong, a popular tourist shopping neighborhood in the center of Seoul where
the retail arms of many of the nation's largest chaebols are abundantly represented and dutyfree shopping is common. Similarly, while the circulatory chase scene broaches the question of
sustainability, it ultimately is more concerned about rule of law than the fate of the global
system. Veteran thus renders identical the problem of free trade and the problem of national
sovereignty in a globalized economic frame, retreating finally into a cautionary, semiprotectionist mode that questions the terms of the deal but not the validity of the enterprise,
and leaves unresolved the more troubling questions it opens in the Busan shipyards.
Fried Chicken Behind the Barricade
Released in the U.S. as a "Netflix Original," Redpeter's Psychokinesis tells the story of a Seokheon (Ryu Seung-ryong) who has left behind his wife and his daughter Roo-mi (Shim Eunkyung), after falling into horrible debt. Years later, he is reunited with Roo-mi, now the
proprietor of a once thriving fried-chicken restaurant, just at the moment when she and a group
of local merchants fight for fair compensation against Tae-san, a large conglomerate that wants
to evict them to make room for a duty-free shopping mall geared toward the booming market
for Chinese tourism. In casting these figures as victims of a more robust economic engagement
between Korea and China, the film charts the costs of such a turn, echoing the kind of semiprotectionist caution that animates Veteran. But, Psychokinesis is more self-conscious about
orchestration — about how the system works as a whole, the broader social reorganization that
results from committing to free trade logics, and who controls the enterprise. To this end, the
plot turns on Seok-heon's discovery of his psychokinetic powers, acquired in a fluke, with which
he is able to challenge the chaebol's determining power, transforming what promised to be a
rout into a more even struggle. It is not a coincidence, then, that when Seok-heon wields his
supernatural ability, he takes on the stance of a manic orchestra conductor, directing the
objects that float about in the air around him as if bidding musicians to follow his whims (Fig. 3).
Crucially, the struggle for control over the economic destiny of the neighborhood manifests as a
struggle for everyday social reproduction.
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Fig. 3. Seok-heon wielding his supernatural ability in Psychokinesis (2018).
A pair of transitional scenes in Psychokinesis, seemingly extraneous in an otherwise tightly
executed comedic film, index a commitment to rehearsals of everyday temporality that define
the terrain of this struggle. The first occurs about halfway through the film, after the first
confrontation between the thugs representing the Tae-san corporation, when Seok-hyeon and
Roo-mi decide to go to a nearby restaurant to have a quick lunch. Roo-mi leads the way through
narrow alleyways while Seok-hyeon follows a few paces back. When they pass a group of men
modestly eating cup ramen, Roo-mi greets them. Just then we see a young schoolgirl begging
her mother for a new cell phone, promising to ace her exam while her mother remains skeptical.
Taking a full minute and paced by melancholy arpeggios on a piano, the scene metonymically
expresses the father's regret over his decision to leave his family by staging a contemplative
walk through the milieu of everyday working-class life. The scene isn't didactic per se; it simply
registers the temporality of ordinary people having ordinary meals (in contrast to the
extravagant lunch that the thugs later have with their Tae-san boss) and voicing ordinary
concerns.
This interest in everyday life registers even more plainly a few scenes later after Tae-san has
used its influence to air a bogus report on the national television news suggesting that Seokhyeon's powers derive from North Korean military technology. The local merchant group
worries that this media assault augurs a violent escalation in the tactics of their adversary. The
second scene of interest, then, occurs the morning of the final showdown between the
merchants and the army of police and thugs that Tae-san has assembled. It begins with a long
panning zoom shot of the barricade that Seok-hyeon has built with his supernatural powers,
beginning in a relative darkness that soon becomes illuminated by emerging sunlight moving at
the pace of the time-lapse setting with which it was shot. The scene then cuts to a shot of an
abandoned balcony and then to an alley where we see a mark spray-painted on a wall indicating
that the empty house has been set to be demolished. These latter two shots are also zoompanning and time-lapsed. These are strangely stylized moments in a commercial film with no
other pretentions toward cinematic art.
The scene appropriates the aforementioned registering of everyday temporality for the
barricade, which amounts to a final defense of ordinary social life against the aggressive
infringements of global trade. On such a stage, we come to understand the barricade to be a
blockade in the sense that Clover has described it: a strategy in circulations struggles for
meeting capital "where [it] has increasingly shifted its resources." 40 It doesn't just serve to
protect the people behind it but also functions to interrupt transnational commerce. As both
barricade and blockade, the wall of junk in the film represents the zero-sum game between the
social life lived behind it and the global flows of transnational trade, for which this social life is
an impediment. The barricade is thus an expression of the real costs of feeding the insatiable
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appetite of transnational capital . 41 Both of these scenes are transitional, functioning to
establish frames for subsequent action, but the protraction of time in both cases — by simple
duration in the first case and by time-lapse in the second — calls attention to the challenges
that transnational supply chains logistics seek to obviate.
Set in this transitional and transnational milieu, slapstick inheres in Seok-hyeon's psychokinetic
powers, and we may think of these powers as a kind of supernatural instantiation of slapstick
logistics, with affected performances of human relationships to circulating objects retooled with
supernatural conceits. Furthermore, if Chaplin's route through the machine's cogs made light of
Fordist alienation, then Seok-hyeon's psychokinesis playfully literalizes the circuits of global
commerce as commodities that fly around at his psychic behest. He first learns of his ability to
move objects with his mind in a scene early in the film when, after coming home drunk to his
messy one-room apartment, he reaches for a lighter across the room to light a cigarette and is
surprised when it flies to his outreached hand. At this moment, his estranged daughter Roo-mi
calls him to tell him that her mother (his ex-wife) has passed away. After the funeral, he returns
to his apartment to try his powers again, this time more soberly. He successfully repeats the
lighter trick and then suddenly, the objects strewn across the room — empty soju bottles, fast
food wrappers, pots and pans, etc. — float in the air and begin to spin counterclockwise around
him as he turns in the opposite direction trying to apprehend what is going on (Fig. 4). Adding
another element to the dizzying choreography, the camera spins around Seok-hyeon, who
remains centered in the shot, in the same direction as the vortex of flying objects, but at a
slightly slower pace, while a polka sets the comedic mood to a minor key. Slapstick here inheres
in what Lisa Trahair, describing Buster Keaton's One Week (1920), calls "the movement of matter
... and the unstoppable momentum of that movement, its pace, temp, and rhythm, and its role in
subsequent displacements, conversions and expulsions." 42 Marx's dancing table becomes a
spinning room; commodities fly around as if on their own in a parodic circulation that playfully
mimics the kind of transnational itineracy of commerce that free trade agreements underwrite,
supply chain logistics orchestrate, and the blockade impedes.
Fig. 4. Seok-heon using his powers to spin objects around him in Psychokinesis (2018).
As in the chase scene from Veteran, this staging of Seok-hyeon's psychokinetic powers presents
the spectacle of frenzied circulation to comedic effect, but this implication turns out to be
ironic. Although Seok-hyeon initially attempts to monetize his new superpower by getting hired
as a magician, he soon turns his attention to aiding in his daughter's effort to resist the eviction.
Deployed primarily in fights with thugs that try to forcibly remove the group from their
neighborhood, slapstick becomes an extension of the blockade, expressing protectionist rather
than entrepreneurial logics. In a series of comic fights, Seok-hyeon wards off the attackers with
aplomb, including in the film's climax when a SWAT team is lifted onto the rooftop within the
group's compound, for some reason, in a modified shipping container that has apparently been
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refashioned for this purpose (Fig. 5). When Roo-mi is pulled aboard it, and it threatens to snap
away from its girding on the crane used to suspend it in the air, Seok-hyeon uses his powers to
prevent it from falling and harming his daughter.
Fig. 5. Police shipping container in Psychokinesis (2018).
Although Psychokinesis is more clear-eyed than Veteran about the global context that the local
merchant's resistance engages, the point is ultimately less anti-hegemonic opposition to global
free trade, and more an expression of anxiety about Korea's dependence on Chinese capital and
the increasingly cozy intimacy between large domestic corporations and Chinese interests. As in
Veteran, the orientation is toward nationalism, the principles of which large Korean corporations
seem to violate with their increasingly transnational interests. At the end of the film, Roo-mi's
fiancé, who was also the lawyer that had been aiding the merchant group, picks up Seok-hyeon
when he is released from prison. Before taking him to Roo-mi's new business, a thriving food
truck aptly named Superhero Chicken, he first shows Seok-hyeon the now empty lot where the
barricaded group had made their last stand. He tells Seok-hyeon that the duty-free mall never
got built because inflated estimates and corruption proved that the project was never practical
from its inception. For the moment, transnational commerce remains in abeyance as Seokhyeon turns his powers to the task of entertaining Roo-mi's customers by floating cups of beer
above their heads as they eat.
We should note here that Roo-mi's fried-chicken business itself also indexes Korean economic
history. After the IMF (International Monetary Fund) Crisis in 1997-98, the number of fried
chicken restaurants exploded in South Korea as unemployed workers sought other means to
support their families, many of whom used their homes as collateral for loans. Growth has
continued dramatically on the supply side: 10,000 restaurants in 2003; 30,000 in 2013; and
50,000 in 2017. 43 But while demand has increased gradually, profits have dwindled because of
increased competition. Such conditions, particularly the dangerous levels of debt among
business proprietors, caused the Wall Street Journal to describe the phenomenon as Korea's
"fried chicken bubble." 44 Though celebrated at the end of the film as a success, Roo-mi's food
truck represents the specter of declining market share for individual proprietors in that same
business. In this context, the surprising and ultimately nonsensical introduction of the shipping
container in the film's finale (to my knowledge, this is not an actual police tactic in Korea or
elsewhere) serves as a reminder of the limits of the domestic market that Roo-mi's customers
represent. Like Veteran, then, Psychokinesis is ultimately limited in its vision of Korean political
economy, notwithstanding its insights about the social costs of aggressive free trade. The film's
representations of systematic economic problems ultimately dead-end with the nomination of
antagonists, namely greedy chaebol and Chinese capital. As in Veteran, the system's villain
obscures the villainy of the system.
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Why Did the Condor Cross the Road?
The 2016 film, El Condor Pasa, is framed by a pair of shots which depict similar scenes with
mirrored blocking, offering an example of one kind of transnational flow in the figure of a group
of Andean musicians crossing an otherwise static scene. In the film's opening shot, the
characters cross from right to left across the screen (Fig. 6), and they reverse direction at film's
end. Both are stationary, long-lens shots, a fact which we can gather from the parallel geometry
formed by road, lane lines, barrier, wires, and sea's horizon. Let us call these crossing shots. In
film history, such shots often appear in slapstick comedies, with origins in Keystone Cops bits
and Buster Keaton gags that have been riffed on recursively in the century since their debut, in
everything from Wes Anderson to Benny Hill to Scooby Doo, albeit with a more frenzied
aesthetic than we see in El Condor Pasa. For early practitioners and their successors, the
crossing shot would usually be an element in a longer chase, in which the bodies of the running
actors provided continuity through a series of different stagings.
Fig. 6. Opening shot of El Condor Pasa (2016).
Buster Keaton's Seven Chances (1925), for example, ends with an impressive sequence in which a
swarm of bridal aspirants chases around the suddenly eligible bachelor, Jimmy Shannon (Buster
Keaton), who has to get married by 7pm on his birthday in order to inherit $7 million. The
numerous crossing shots in this larger sequence include hilarious depictions of a football game,
a Turkish bath that Keaton unwittingly enters on Ladies day, a steel yard, and a bee farm; all of
these serving as orderly sites of either leisure or production that become disrupted by the
chaotic mob dashing after Keaton. Unlike the interspersed tracking shots that follow the racing
Keaton and the women chasing him, the stationary camera of the crossing shots orients the
viewer's eyes first to the features of the space before introducing the running figures as part of
the broader chase. It's essentially the same scene repeated in different locations. We see bodies
crossing and disrupting spaces clearly demarcated by the industries and activities that define
them. The chase levels difference between otherwise disparate scenes, making a mess of
particularity with its entropic tendency to ruin everything in its path.
Although the framing scenes from El Condor Pasa are certainly less frenetic than Keaton's, they
do share the simultaneous compression of space and duration. Keaton's sequencing suggests
that the chase covers a good deal of space, accruing humorous absurdity as it proceeds from an
urban location with a flat topography to somewhere far out in nature amidst mountains and
rolling deserts and leaving what remains in between the rapidly-cut scenes to our imaginations.
The framing shots in El Condor Pasa, in contrast, produce this sense of spatial compression by
implying the movement of these itinerant musicians over longer distances, most significantly
the distance between South America and East Asia. But though different in their stagings, both
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examples turn on the discontinuity between the depicted spaces and the figures that occupy
them. If in Keaton we are asked to reconcile the discontinuities between the different
conventions of each new site that the chase enters and makes a mess of in each successive
scene, then in El Condor Pasa we are forced to reckon the disparity between the group of
Ecuadorian musicians, and the decidedly Korean context through which they pass.
El Condor Pasa (El kkondorŭ ppasa, 2016) was one of two films released in the last decade by
Korean filmmakers with similar titles, after the iconic Peruvian song, the other being Jeon Sooil's 2012 film (K'ondurŭn naraganda,), which was released outside of Korea with the same Spanish
title (though the title is slightly different in Korean). In both versions of El Condor Pasa, the
selection of an iconic Andean song for the title signals the film's interest in Korea-Latin America
relations. The backdrop here is the rise of bilateral FTAs between South Korea and various Latin
American nations, first in anticipation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement as it was
being negotiated under U.S. guidance since 2008 and later as compensation for the breakdown
of the deal when the U.S. formally withdrew in 2017. South Korea had come to an agreement
with Peru in 2011, with Columbia in 2016, and with a bloc of Central American nations (Costa
Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama) in 2018. In addition, South Korea began
pursuing a deepening of an existing agreement (in place since 2004) with Chile in 2016 and
initiated negotiations with both Mexico and Mercosur (a South American trading bloc including
Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay) in 2018.
South Korea's interstate trade strategies with respect to Latin America, where K-pop music and
culture have gained a significant foothold, reflects semi-imperial behavior by a powerful but not
dominant economy seeking reliable capital streams beyond the short term after the breakdown
of the TPP and the anxiety provoked by a reliance on Chinese trade. 45 In this vacuum, South
Korea attempted to recoup on a smaller scale the kinds of benefits that it would have enjoyed
with less effort and to greater degree in a more robust and more centrally orchestrated global
system by negotiating bilateral agreements that mimic arrangements that the US once held with
peripheral partners (i.e. access to natural resources and low-cost agricultural products, while
securing new markets for technology and investment opportunities for financial and rentseeking ventures). But such activity is both compensatory and nostalgic as the semiperipheral
nation lacks the capacity and reach to fully reproduce the growth possible in a more robust
system.
The musicians in El Condor Pasa's opening shot are an actual Ecuadorian band called Kawsay
that was active in Korea for a decade until a few years after both films were released. Kawsay
was part of a global wave of Andean music groups that began to pop up as street musicians in
public squares and university campuses in North America and Europe during the 1990s, though
Kawsay was singular in its focus on South Korea. We might think of Kawsay as standing at the
intersection of two stories. One story is that of Korea's adoption of globalization as an explicit
state strategy in the 1990s under the Kim Young-sam administration's segyewha initiative
(segyewha literally means globalization), as an attempt to deal with slowing growth under the
threat of deindustrialization. The other story is the similar situation that Latin American
economies faced during the same period, seeking global solutions for troubled times. Within
this broader context, as Kristie Dorr has suggested, Andean music grew into an informal global
industry, prompted by the international popularity of Paul Simon's 1969 rendition of Daniel
Alomía Robles's iconic Peruvian song, "El Condor Pasa," to which the two Korean films refer
(though Koreans of a certain generation generally know the song through the Simon and
Garfunkel version). 46 Dorr argues that a local oligarchy brokered neocolonial arrangements
privileging foreign investment over the interests of the domestic proletariat, 47 prompting the
migration of musicians from Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador and gradually the forging of an informal
industry consisting of "provisional transnational performance and migration networks (that
shared information about, e.g., where to play without police or merchant interference, and in
some cases, how to get there while evading the risk of deportation) that connected urban
centers in the Andean region to cities throughout Central America, Mexico, and, later, the
United States." 48 Dorr's account suggests the extent to which the musicians were at once
victims of globalization and transnational entrepreneurs making the best of the same forces that
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caused their precarity. We might regard Andean music here on the somewhat remote eastern
coast of the Korean peninsula as the mirror reverse phenomenon as K-pop in Latin America:
both rooted in a crisis that is subsequently subsumed within spectacular forms. 49 Kawsay's
itineracy, as figured in the framing shots of El Condor Pasa, indexes the set of economic
transformations that initially spurred their own long-distance chase.
Kawsay's crossing into the world of the film is thus a crossing into transnational commerce that
connects one index of precarity to another. The flip side of Kawsay's transnational story of
migration is the domestic story of debt, which has become a dominant feature of contemporary
South Korean film and television narratives since the 1997-98 Asian Financial Crisis when the
nations household debt levels ballooned to among the highest in the world. The film tells the
story of Soo-ah (Gang Ye-won), a woman who was forced to leave her formerly prosperous
urban life to run a highway rest stop that she has inherited. A failing business, the rest stop
comes to signify the dire state of Soo-ah's life in general. There are no customers; the food is
bad; the employees are feckless; and to make matters worse, Soo-ah is asked by her down-onher-luck brother to care for his daughter, who has not spoken aloud since her mother left the
family; the brother eventually dies making the decidedly un-nurturing Soo-ah the girl's
permanent caretaker. If these were not problems enough, we learn that the brother has taken
out a large loan on the rest stop, which Soo-ah is now responsible for and cannot repay. The
arrival of Kawsay to this plot, in the larger context of the Andean music industry as described by
Dorr, functions both as mirror and ameliorative.
Though it deploys slapstick conventions, as we will see, El Condor Pasa is what we might call a
business redemption film, which might be defined as a depiction of a failing business repaired
with the help of an external consultant figure. Films in this subgenre appropriate generic
elements from humanistic redemption films like The Shawshank Redemption (1994) or Gran
Torino (2008) — in which a character reconciles a troubled past and manages to proceed with
life focused on more modest satisfactions — and from the classic western plot of the stranger
helping a troubled town fix its problems (The Magnificent Seven, 1960, 2016). More narrowly, the
business redemption film foregrounds commercial problems, usually the lack of customers,
though financial concerns frequently serve as synecdoche for broader hardships. These are
most commonly either restaurant narratives, like Juzo Itami's Tampopo (1985) and Campbell
Scott and Stanley Tucci's Big Night (1996), or else stories about industrial or technological
obsolescence, like Sidney Lumet's Network (1976), Ron Howard's Gung Ho (1986), or Michel
Gondry's Be Kind Rewind (2008), in which the redemption of the business is part of a last-ditch
attempt to save a dying industry or medium. 50
El Condor Pasa encompasses many of these generic permutations: the highway rest stop is
obsolete because a newly built highway bypasses its location, and even locals avoid the place
because of the poor food. This causes the already depressed protagonist to regard the business
as the object form of her deteriorating life. In the manner of management consultants-cumexotic shamans, Kawsay solve all of these problems. By providing entertainment and good cheer,
they eventually draw customers to the location, and they also teach the staff how to cook
delicious Ecuadorian dishes like churrasco that become an immediate hit. At the culmination of
the movie, a couple that we initially seeing breaking up at the rest stop earlier in the film, and
later see reuniting at the same location just in time to sample the new menu, end up getting
married at the business in a big wedding that the musicians plan, officiate, and cater. And in
repairing the business, they also help Soo-ah and the young girl begin new lives with a degree of
optimism.
Itself a kind of redemptive business, Kawsay is so helpful in the face of crisis perhaps because
they themselves are also products of it. Accordingly, their intervention instantiates the salutary
benefits of free trade in the face of stagnation; their relationship with Soo-ah and her business
is mutually beneficial. Such an allegory would wear a thin veil, given that South Korea, with
growing worries about its economic future (and its increasing dependence on exports to China),
entered negotiations with Ecuador in the second half of 2015, precisely as El Condor Pasa was
being made, as part of the aforementioned series of FTAs it was negotiating with Latin American
nations and trading blocs during the period.
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But though the allegorical implications of such remediation seem clear, it remains unclear why
all this film, like Veteran and Psychokinesis, employs slapstick comedy to point toward these
implications. We have already broached an initial answer, which is simply that slapstick
translates. Keaton himself famously hated dialogue and title cards, which he would insert with
the utmost economy, far preferring to express bodily what might be otherwise put into words.
In El Condor Pasa, the challenge presented by a film made for a Korean audience featuring quite
a bit of spoken Spanish is solved by Kawsay's leader who speaks both Korean and Spanish
fluently. The presence of a translator between the Korean speaking management in the film and
the Spanish-speaking workers in turn suggests the kinds of negotiations and accords occurring
during that same period over interstate trade.
A slapstick scene that occurs through the midpoint of the movie provides a fuller answer.
Kawsay decide to have a night-time barbeque party in front of their makeshift home, which
appropriately for this free-trade comedy is actually a shipping container. Toward the end of the
meal, one of the rest-stop employees learns that the meat that he has been eating with such
relish comes from his beloved pet goat, which the band members had prepared without
realizing that it was his pet. A slapstick chase subsequently erupts, depicted in two discrete
shots, the first in which the group chases around the shipping container and then the second a
crossing shot in which the chase proceeds back and forth through and out of a stationary frame
centered around the rest-stop's front doors (Figs. 7 and 8). As in Veteran, this is a circulatory
chase. Here the scene comically re-enacts what the rest stop as a business so dearly lacks:
traffic. This traffic in turn compensates for the lack of customer flow with a spectacle of zany
movement. 51 In so doing, the scene resituates this otherwise forgotten rest stop on a forgotten
road as a site of not just local but global circulation, a milieu in which it becomes quite natural
to see Andean musicians who sleep in a converted shipping container chased by an angry
country yokel seeking vengeance for his pet goat. Comedy engages here in what Lauren Berlant
and Sianne Ngai, citing the deformation of the living into the mechanical and vice-versa in both
Bergson and Zumpancic, describe as the comic ability to offer a "pleasure-spectacle of form's
self-violation." Human figures toggle here between literal and figurative registers, becoming
increments of supply-chain logistics in the manner that Chaplin famously became a cog in the
machine. As in the two films discussed above, free-trade slapstick here parodically reconstitutes
global circulation at human scale, but El Condor Pasa's slapstick concerns are more
fundamental. The film is keenly aware that comedy is finally an anxious form of expression, and
one that frequently maps on to the broader anxieties of the age. This film is far less confident in
adjudicating the villains of global commerce, but rather seems to intuit that the problem is much
more deep-seated and fundamental. In this respect, the logics animating El Condor Pasa are
more like those of U.S.-depression era slapstick than those of Veteran and Psychokinesis. But if in
Chaplin and Keaton the anxiety is about the place of humans in a world of machines and
industrial capitalism, then the anxiety of the free trade comedy here is something like: how long
can we keep up this chase?
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Fig. 7. Chase scene in front of Kawsay's shipping container home in El Condor Pasa (2016).
Fig. 8. Chase scene in front of highway rest stop in El Condor Pasa (2016).
It turns out not for long. Although El Condor Pasa resolves its redemption narrative with the
business's success, the emotional healing of Soo-ah, and the final speech of the heretofore silent
young girl, it also fails to deliver the ego ideal of the business redemption film, the business
model. That is, the film conspicuously avoids the question of sustaining the rest stop's recent
success with the departure of its primary generator of revenue when Kawsay continue their
musical itineracy down the road. This avoidance calls attention to the fact that it was not the
new practices that led to the business' success, but the accord that underlay them. Slapstick in
the film thus references transnational accord while simultaneously indexing the limits of such
ephemeral solutions: the imagined community is merely a patch. Crucially, then, although the
motley crew at the highway rest stop come together to form a short-lived community, we see
that this is a community not facilitated by the determination of a sacrificial victim as a means to
limit harm (as Bataille might have it), but rather one that is entirely composed of sacrificial
victims whose loose and transient sense of affiliation is formed not out their survival of violence
but rather in relation their continual vulnerability to it. In the most comic register, the goat's
victimhood becomes that of his owner at the moment he realizes his delicious dinner was once
his beloved pet. But at a further remove, we see that everyone that participates in the
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circulatory chase has been made to suffer the consequences of actions not their own. As we
have seen, Kawsay's travels are less the romantic itineracy of artist rogues and more the forced
migration set in motion by oligarchs choosing their own priorities at the expense of others. The
girl cannot speak not because of a medical condition but because of the traumas that she has
already endured at this young age. And perhaps most pertinently, Soo-ah's debt burden is no
less heavy, even though it was passed on to her by her brother who, under difficult conditions,
reached for the elixir of easy credit.
The post-IMF period in South Korea witnessed a debt-shift, namely the shift of state and
corporate debt to the general public. Jamie Doucette and Bongman Seo have argued that the
supposed return to healthy growth of the South Korean economy following the IMF bailout in
1998 and specifically the "historic growth in stock market capitalization and the financial profit
rate" was based on the simultaneous "historic rise in consumer debt." 52 The death blow to
state-orchestrated industrial policy meted out by the IMF bailout terms led to a "more
haphazard financial system," in which capital accumulation depended on improvisation in
different ventures. This new financial system culminated in the so-called "credit card crisis" of
2003, when outstanding credit-card debt had increased by five times in the space of less than
five years. South Korea had gone from having one of the highest rates of savings in the world to
among the highest rates of consumer debt. 53 The explosion of consumer debt in the immediate
post-IMF period has turned out to be a turning point and not an aberration. South Korea's
household debt (which includes consumer debt and mortgages) hit a record $1.3 trillion in 2017
and has continued to increase since then, growing at the among the fastest rates in the world. 54
The social cost of such changes was immediate, most starkly visible in debt-related suicides,
reports of which became fixtures in television news and depictions of which became widely
prevalent in Korean film and television.
The point here, however, is not to pin the transnational social relations articulated in El Condor
Pasa on this specific material frame but rather to highlight more generally the way in which
even utopian visions of communal formation in the film are undergirded by transnational
systems of interconnected relations that create opportunities for capital at the expense of more
capacious networks of vulnerability. This is a business redemption narrative in which the
solution reproduces the crisis that required the initial fix. The kind of post-IMF Korean debtshift that Doucette and Seo trace is symptomatic of a broader global framework in which it
becomes easier for powerful interests to game the system in the name of freedom and global
harmony.
This is ultimately the toggle of free trade slapstick. Doubling down on the liberal rhetoric of
postwar internationalism in which the rising tide of free trade would lift all boats, free trade
efforts — at the end of the Washington Consensus era — served to "empower a different set of
rent-seeking interests and politically well-connected firms" than those that had dominated an
earlier era. Benefitting "international banks, pharmaceutical companies, and multinational
firms," such free trade policies, as Dani Rodrik has noted, aimed for "purely redistributive
outcomes under the guise of 'freer trade.'" 55 Logistics operations, in this context, are always
trying to perfect something other than free trade, lip-service notwithstanding. In slapstick's
pairing of communal humor and violence, we see how the spectacle of cooperation and
affiliation falls immediately apart in the face of the kind of sub-imperial exploitation that KoreaLatin American FTAs formalize. These imbalances are felt not necessarily between nations per
se but rather are more forcefully staged between capital and labor, and between large and small
producers in industry and agriculture. Class difference becomes increasingly transnational. It is
not surprising then that the case against FTAs has typically been made in terms of human
rights. 56 At the end of the Washington Consensus, trade deals and transnational trading bloc
are more about the tenuous balance of competing interests and the effort to manage uneven
leverage than they are about leveling global playing fields. 57 Community becomes a mode of
transnational exploitation rather than its remedy.
In El Condor Pasa (2016) then, we sense at last the full measure of slapstick toggling between the
desire for redemption (be it economic or personal) on the one hand and the exposure to harm
that redemptive efforts risk on the other. And because the very possibilities of social cohesion
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that might redress the systemic inequities that made redemption necessary require reproducing
free trade logics rather than abandoning them, this toggling becomes all the more frantic. Its
happy ending notwithstanding, El Condor Pasa, much more than Veteran or Psychokinesis,
evokes the impasse that determines this historical moment, which requires us to keep up the
chase even when we see that we are running in circles.
So Funny I Forgot to Laugh
Totally bereft of slapstick, El Condor Pasa, the 2012 art film by indie-auteur Jeon Soo-il, seems to
share only a title with its 2016 namesake. Depicting the reaction of a priest to the brutal rape
and murder of a young girl from his parish whom he had favored, the film moves painfully slowly
through his feelings of guilt and quest for redemption, which ends, somewhat inexplicably, with
a trip to Peru. 58 As is the case in many of Jeon's films, which often involve travel overseas, it is
not immediately clear why the priest has to go to that distant location, though El Condor
Pasa does offer the audience the opportunity to hear finally the song after which the film is
named.
But if the film's diegesis fails to explain the need to travel, the film's more comic namesake offers
a comparative frame for the problem of redemption that inheres in Jeon's invocation of travel, in
both business and personal registers. Despite their differences, both films share a set of
anxieties about how radical interconnectedness yields radical vulnerability. While the comic El
Condor Pasa is committed to an explicit thematization of global traffic flows in a comedic mode,
its somber cousin offers a sublimated version of the trade deal in which emotional inputs are
sought abroad when they are lacking at home. And though slapstick is absent from Jeon's
version, the critical toggling associated with it persists in the structure of the priest's guilt. In
this respect, this emotional redemption film has more in common with the business redemption
model discussed above than might be initially apparent. Crucially, as with Soo-ah and her
highway rest stop, it is not clear that the priest is culpable in any direct way. Guilt functions in
the film not only as something like an unpayable debt, an all-consuming force that demands
much more than timely remittances, but also as in the other El Condor Pasa, as a debt that is
actually incurred by someone else who is more directly responsible (the brother in one film, the
murderer in the other). The priest had always kept an eye out for the young girl, and the violent
attack that ended her life was difficult to anticipate, even though it came at the hands of
someone the priest knew. Nevertheless, he feels a growing burden for not being able to spare
the young girl who was deeply devoted to his church.
The need for redemption thus expresses a need to alleviate a form of guilt that is more profound
than that of the original perpetrator, who is too consumed with his own problems to look
outward at the damage he has inflicted. Bound not to the logic of personal responsibility but to
the vagaries of broader social relations, guilt arises not as a result of one's own actions but over
the unintended consequences of actions that are adjacent to one's own, adjacencies which are in
turn spatialized in the film through the spectacle of international travel. Typically for Jeon Sooil, transnational travel opens up an allegorical space of both utter confusion and potential
redress. Because the resolutions are always ambiguous, Jeon's vision of transnational travel
always resolves into something that is more like an echo chamber than a pilgrimage. By placing
this guilt in the context of global trade, however, we might finally make sense of what seems
otherwise nonsensical travel. The pressures of such burdensome debt, we might say, require a
spatial fix.
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Fig. 9. Perspectival shot before murder of young girl in El Condor Pasa (2012).
Fig. 10. Perspectival shot before priest is robbed in El Condor Pasa (2012).
In contrast to the light-hearted crossing shots in the film's namesake, Jeon's El Condor Pasa
offers a pair of perspectival shots from handheld cameras of narrow alleyways, one in Korea (in
Busan) and the other in a rural town in Peru (Figs. 9 and 10). The first represents the perspective
of the young girl before she is killed; and the second is that of the priest just before he is robbed
and stabbed. We might think of such shots as exact opposites of the slapstick crossing shots in
the other film. Here the framing is subjective and austere instead of impersonal and cheeky.
Whereas the slapstick crossings are made reassuringly predictable by repetition, the
perspective here is afraid of the violence that stands outside of the field of vision and unable to
anticipate it. Befitting their subject matter, we might say that these shots are structurally not
funny as well. Immersive attempts to capture the anxiety of the moment, instead of cool
recordings of action from a distance, they eschew comedy's historically social character. 59
Indeed, humor's inclination toward communal propagation indexes a social orientation that
forms the conditions of possibility in old jokes: a man walks into a bar, a chicken (forsaking its
familiar habitat) crosses the road. Unlike the comedic crossing scenes in the other El Condor
Pasa, these handheld perspectival shots are bound by their own vision and tortured
consciousness, disavowing any humor in tragedy.
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However, insofar as they are linked to the idea of travel, in the sense of wandering through
unfamiliar corridors, these shots do return us obliquely to the scene of trade, if only to offer a
cautionary note against the comedic embrace that we witnessed in this film's namesake. If
global trade proposes to connect the world within an expansive network of routes and flows
that we tend to experience only in the most abstract and macroscopic registers, then these
scenes dramatize in much more microscopic terms the chilling feeling of what it means to
navigate a specific unfamiliar passageway far from the safety of home. There are always thieves
and murderers, we learn, lurking in the alleyways of global commerce. Travel down such
corridors must be weighed against significant risks. The redemption we seek may not be worth
the costs. It is certainly not a laughing matter.
In the post-Washington Consensus moment, particularly for export dependent nations like
South Korea, post-developmental states have out of necessity engaged in the kind of delicate
toggling back and forth between circulatory enthusiasm and protectionist caution that we have
seen expressed in free trade slapstick. When trade deals have been negotiated by South Korea in
the past decade, the state's interest has been to protect the interests of Samsung and LG over
those of farmers and workers while being fully cognizant of the consequences of such a trade. 60
The state in this post-developmental, export-dependent context, we see, is not exactly a selfdetermining sovereign actor but rather one that must respond to the various incentives and
foreclosures that define its political economy in a frantic balancing act that, like slapstick, must
court and mitigate harm. The point here is more agnostic than to garner sympathy for such
semi-peripheral states subject to the whims of larger powers. In the frantic scramble to secure
markets for products expressed in free trade slapstick, we gain a sense of the new world order
in Asia and the Pacific Rim in slower and more decisive movements. As in slapstick, the state's
performance of logistical co-ordination courts the very disasters its performance is designed to
mitigate. These performances always also mark the limit point between comedy and tragedy,
between just in time humor and the violence it manages to hold away, if only at arm's length.
Joseph Jonghyun Jeon is Professor of English and Asian American Studies at the University of
California, Irvine. He is the author of Vicious Circuits: Korea's IMF Cinema and the End of the
American Century (Stanford University Press, 2019) and Racial Things, Racial Forms: Objecthood
in Avant-Garde Asian American Poetry (University of Iowa Press, 2012).
References
1. Louise Peacock, "Conflict and Slapstick in Comedia dell'Arte: The Double Act of Pantalone and Arlecchino,"
Comedy Studies 4.1 (2013): 61. [ ]
2. See Simon Critchley, On Humor (London: Routledge, 2002), 79-91. Critchley argues that humor in general is a
form of sensus communis. [ ]
3. Georges Bataille, "Sacrifice," trans. Annette Michelson, October 36 (1986): 68-74. For a discussion of this essay
see, William Solomon, Slapstick Modernism: Chaplin to Kerouac to Iggy Pop (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
2016), 34-38. See also Kathleen Moran and Michael Rogin, "What's the Matter with Capra?: Sullivan's Travels and
the Popular Front," Representations 71 (2000): 106-134. Moran and Rogin offer a contrasting vision of laughter:
"Far from merry enjoyment, the maniacal laughter in the closing montage [of Sullivan's Travels] ... looks and
sounds like hysteria ... It is laughter at the death of laughter, the laughter that comes after and with the chain
gang, which it cannot wipe away. Although it apparently has the opposite ending, Sullivan's Travels is the lineal
descendant of A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, the ur-American example of comedy turning into
horror before our eyes" (127). [ ]
4. Walter Benjamin, "The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility (2nd Version; 1936)," Selected
Writings, Volume 3, 1935-1938, ed. Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings (Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 2002), 118. Solomon has suggested that the social function of this mode of comedy for Benjamin "was its
capacity to serve as a means for large groups of disenfranchised people to adjust in an empowering fashion to
the pressures of everyday existence in the city as well as to the burdens of mechanized labor" (12). [ ]
5. Georges Bataille, The Accursed Share: An Essay on General Economy (New York: Zone Books, 1988), 58. [ ]
6. Georges Bataille, The Accursed Share, 59. Keynesian in sensibility, Bataille considered the ritual sacrifices of
warfare — and its figurative iterations in slapstick — pragmatic attempts to protect the larger community from
the difficulties that arise within a trajectory otherwise moving in a more sanguine direction. As Vincent Pecora
writes of Bataille's strategy, however, "The new community may be elective, but it is constructed precisely to
obviate all decisions beyond those that guarantee its own existence." While this steam-valve capacity affords a
loose analog for managed growth in a crisis-avoidance strategy during periods of industrial expansion, Bataille's
vision of sacrifice has limited pertinence to the real economy, particularly as growth begins to stagnate; Vincent
P. Pecora, Households of the Soul (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997), 49. [ ]
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7. As Michael North puts it, for Bergson, "the comic response is supposed to correct the mechanical behavior of
others," but in so doing "it also excites in the laughter an equally unconscious mechanism," which leads to a
finally the kind of "tangled relationship between freedom and domination" that Benjamin sought to resolve.
Michael North, Machine Age Comedy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), 16. [ ]
8. Miriam Hansen, Cinema and Experience (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011), 80. [ ]
9. Ibid., 164. [ ]
10. Ibid., 165. [ ]
11. Ibid., 80. [ ]
12. Ibid., 132. [ ]
13. Walter Benjamin, "Fate and Character," in Selected Writings, Volume I, 1913-1936, ed. Marcus Bullock and Michael
W. Jennings (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996), 205. [ ]
14. Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment: Philosophical Fragments, Edmund
Jephcott, ed. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2002), 1. [ ]
15. Theodore Martin, Contemporary Drift: Genre Historicism, and the Problem of the Present (New York: Columbia
University Press, 2017), 6-7. [ ]
16. Hansen, Cinema and Experience, 87. [ ]
17. See Julie Orlemanski, "Genre," in A Handbook of Middle English Studies, ed. Marion Turner (Malden: WileyBlackwell, 2013), 218. [ ]
18. See Owen Hatherley, The Chaplin Machine: Slapstick, Fordism, and the Communist Avant-Garde (London: Pluto
Press, 2016), 5. "But what if scientific management and slapstick comedy were not actually antipodes at all, but
instead were closely linked and complementary phenomena?" [ ]
19. Lucy Hunter and R. Lyon, "Freight and Message: View on Distribution and Standardization from a Shipping
Container in Brooklyn," Media Fields Journal 10 (2015): 4. [ ]
20. We might think of Benjamin's short-term historicism in relation to Fredric Jameson's critique of the short
horizons of finance capital—of quarterly profits and futures trading. See Fredric Jameson, "The End of
Temporality," Critical Inquiry 29.4 (2003): 703-4. Here Jameson writes: "to be sure, the recent past is always the
most distant in the mind's eye of the historical observer" (emphasis mine). [ ]
21. Immanuel Wallerstein, World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction (Durham: Duke University Press, 2004), 29-30. [
]
22. David Josef Volodzko, "China wins its war against South Korea's US THAAD missile shield — without firing a
shot," South China Morning Post, 18 November 2017 and Shuli Ren, "China's Sanctions Over THAAD Can Sink
Korea's Economy," Barron's, 5 March 2017. [ ]
23. Dani Rodrik, "What Do Trade Agreements Really Do?" Journal of Economic Perspectives 32.2 (2018): 76-85. See
David Ricardo, On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (London: John Murray, Albermarle-Street,
1817). [ ]
24. Joel R. Paul, "The Cost of Free Trade," Brown Journal of World Affairs 22 (2015): 7. [ ]
25. See Rodrik, "What Do Trade Agreements Really Do?" [ ]
26. Anwar Shaik, "Globalization and the Myth of Free Trade," in Globalization and the Myths of Free Trade, ed. Anwar
Shaik (London: Routledge, 2007), 63. [ ]
27. For an account of South Korean slapstick cinema in the 1950s, see Chung-Kang Kim, "South Korean Golden-Age
Comedy Film: Industry, Genre, and Popular Culture (1953-1970)," PhD diss., (University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, 2010), 108-25 and Darcy Paquet, "Genrebending in Contemporary Korean Cinema," 6 July 2000.
Since genre is as much about technique as it is about thematic coherence, slapstick in these cases indexes of a
larger historical impulse in the modern marketing strategies to retool genre into something like trope, an
impulse that is particularly accelerated by the algorithmic methods in popular online streaming services in
which machinic sorting methods torque historical genre categories with consumer behavioral data. Such
marketing strategies (which predated internet optimization by at least a few generations) end up producing a
lexicon of generic features that become available for recombinant strategies in their attempt to isolate boxoffice driving characteristics. So, what has been termed genre bending, a much-heralded feature of
contemporary Korean cinema since the IMF crisis, turns out to be business as usual for modern filmmaking that
is at least as old as the this-meets-that elevator pitch. [ ]
28. For an account of this style in relation to Chan's broader screen persona, see Steve Fore, "Life Imitates
Entertainment: Home and Dislocation in the Films of Jackie Chan," in At Full Speed: Hong Kong Cinema in a
Borderless World, ed. Esther C.M. Yau (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2001), 128-29. [ ]
29. Ackbar Abbas, Hong Kong: Culture and the Politics of Disappearance (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
1997), 30. [ ]
30. By populism, I mean to invoke the most general usage of the term, as opposed to the more xenophobic and
racist implications of the term, though certainly Korean populism is not immune from such critiques. [ ]
31. The labor situation explored in the film has less to do with an irresponsible employer and more with a system in
which contracted, discrete entities allow for lower corporate costs as well as more plausible deniability. When
the truck driver goes up the chain to seek remuneration of unpaid wages, he must make his case on ethical
instead of contractual grounds, as his agreement was not with the parent corporation, but with a contracted
intermediary. [ ]
32. South Korea's measured interest in the TPP was complicated by its economic dependency on China and its
inclusion in discussions for the Chinese led Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). See Minhyung Kim, "Avoiding Being a Crushed Prawn and Becoming a Dolphin Swimming between the Two Fighting
Whales?: South Korea's Strategic Choice in the Face of Intensifying Sino-US Competition," Journal of Asian and
African Studies 53.4 (2018): 619. [ ]
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33. Joshua Clover, Riot. Strike. Riot.: The New Era of Uprisings (London: Verso, 2016), 30-31. [ ]
34. Ibid., 143. [ ]
35. Such films themselves followed on the heels of the prolonged warehouse/trucking era of domestic distribution
(Smokey and the Bandit, 1977; Beverly Hills Cop, 1984). [ ]
36. Sohee Kim and Kyunghee Park, "Hanjin's ghost ships seek havens with food and water starting to dwindle,"
Bloomberg, 6 September 2016. [ ]
37. See Steven Jacobs and Hilde D'Haeyere, "Frankfurter Slapstick: Benjamin, Kracauer, and Adorno on American
Screen Comedy," October 160 (2017): 42-43. [ ]
38. Michael North, Machine Age Comedy, 11. [ ]
39. Jennifer Fay, Inhospitable World: Cinema in the Time of the Anthropocene (New York: Oxford University Press,
2018), 25-26. [ ]
40. Clover, Riot. Strike. Riot, 30-31. [ ]
41. Significantly, the merchants are not asking to keep their businesses outright, but rather for fair compensation.
As Clover derives from E.P. Thompson's writing about 18th-century England, the blockade is one of a number of
strategies that takes price-setting as its unifying goal. See Clover, Riot. Strike. Riot., 43 and E.P. Thompson, "The
Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century," Past and Present 50 (1971): 107-8. [ ]
42. Lisa Trahair, The Comedy of Philosophy: Sense and Nonsense in Early Cinematic Slapstick (Albany: State
University of New York Press, 2007), 56. [ ]
43. "Why fried chicken is battering South Korea's economy" (video), Wall Street Journal, 14 September 2013; Jason
Strother, "South Korea's obsession with fried chicken, explained," PRI.org, 1 March 2017; Park Hye-min and Kim
Min-sang, "Chicken and beer: a deep fried history," Korea JoongAng Daily, 1 August 2014. [ ]
44. "Why fried chicken is battering South Korea's economy" (video), Wall Street Journal, 14 September 2013. [ ]
45. For commentary on South Korea's semi-imperial behavior see, Jin-kyung Lee, Service Economies: Militarism, Sex
Work, and Migrant Labor in South Korea (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2010), 37-77. See also Youngmi
Choi, "A middle power's trade policy under U.S.-China FTA competition: South Korea's double hedging FTA
diplomacy," Contemporary Politics 24.2 (2018): 245-56. Choi tracks the double hedging strategy of South Korea
mediating between opposing U.S.-Chinese interests, a strategy that has produced certain benefits, but retains a
good deal of risk. [ ]
46. See Kirstie A. Dorr, On Site, in Sound: Performance Geographies in America Latina (Durham: Duke UP, 2018), 2545. Dorr describes the multiple layers of appropriation in the song's history, which she describes as Peru's
"second national anthem." The original composer of the song, Daniel Alomía Robles, borrowed from indigenous
traditions, meeting the demands of populist nationalism with a folkloric authenticity. In 1965, Paul Simon heard
The Inkas's version of the song. The members were Argentinian and Venezuelan and had learned to play Andean
music in Paris. Simon paid The Inkas a fee to produce and record an arrangement of the song, which was
released in 1969 with Simon's lyrics. Alomía Robles not credited, his son successfully sued Simon. [ ]
47. Ibid., 32. [ ]
48. Ibid. 72-73. [ ]
49. See Benjamin Han, "K-Pop in Latin America: Transcultural Fandom and Digital Mediation," International Journal
of Communication 11(2017): 2250-69. [ ]
50. The previously discussed Keaton film Seven Chances might indeed fit under this rubric: claiming the inheritance
is so pressing in the film because Jimmy's brokerage firm is about to go under. [ ]
51. While the zaniness of these scene is certainly linked to the broader political economy that Sianne Ngai's
account foregrounds, the spectacle here is less about the kind of labor required to thrive in a post-fordist milieu
and more about systemic operations on a larger scale. See Sianne Ngai, Our Aesthetic Categories: Zany, Cute,
Interesting (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015), 174-232. [ ]
52. Jamie Doucette and Bongman Seo, "Limits to Financialization?: Locating Financialization within East Asian
Export Economies," working paper, Hirotsubashi University Repository, September 2011, 8-9. [ ]
53. Hae Won Choi and Gordon Fairclough, "After credit binge in South Korea, big bill comes due," Wall Street
Journal, 20 January 2004. [ ]
54. Jiyeun Lee, "S. Korea's Household Debt Hits Record $1.3 Trillion in 2017," Bloomberg, 21 February 2018. [ ]
55. Rodrik, "What Do Trade Agreements Really Do?", 88-89. [ ]
56. Thomas Fritz, The Second Conquest: The EU Free Trade Agreement with Colombia and Peru (Berlin: Center for
Research and Documentation Chile-Latin America, 2010), 22. [ ]
57. See Jeronim Capaldo and Alex Izurieta, "Macroeconomic Effects of 21st Century Trade and Investment
Agreements: The Case of the Trans-Pacific Partnership," Development and Change 49.4 (2018). The TPP, for
example, promised increased growth and productivity for all participating nations with no net job loss; but as
critics have pointed out, this optimism rested on the specious assumption that these economies operate always
in full employment. Projections with more realistic parameters showed that net job lost would be more on the
order of 770,000. [ ]
58. The destination is not completely random in that it reverses the direction of Peruvian migration to South Korea
beginning the 1990s. See Erica Vogel, Migrant Conversions: Transforming Connections Between Peru and South
Korea (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2020) and Erica Vogel, "Predestined Migrations: Undocumented
Peruvians in South Korean Churches," City and Society 26.3 (2014): 331-51. The article above offers context for
the priest's connection to Peru on the basis of religion in Jeon's El Condor Pasa. [ ]
59. For a historical account of how this came to be, see Jan Walsh Hokenson, The Idea of Comedy: History, Theory,
Critique (Madison: Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 2006), 23-63. [ ]
60. To be sure, this is story is as old as capitalism itself. What is perhaps more novel is the extreme degree to which
the modern FTA and trade policy in general have become primary modes of circumventing oversight and
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democratic processes, granting significant power to the actors who lay claim to these mechanisms, whether it is
Donald Trump willy-nilly slapping tariffs on scotch or Samsung stepping into the Korea-Japan trade conflict. [
]
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