Reception of Mesopotamia on Film. Maria de Fatima Rosa

Reception of Mesopotamia on Film - Maria de Fatima Rosa


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such as L’eroe di Babilonia (1963) inclusively portray women “with crowns (…) on their heads”59 and wrists. It goes without saying that such a custom is not documented in ancient Mesopotamian sources, merely deriving from a “Greek tendency to judge other cultures by how much they deviated from Greek social behavior, deemed the civilized norm,”60 a tendency that gave rise to fantasy and fiction.

      In the confrontation between the Fertile Crescent and Hellas, the latter would be victorious. However, the duel between them could only end with the destruction and total annulment of the city of Babylon, which is overthrown and set on fire. The glory of the West, the liberation of the oppressed population, and the return of the heroes “to their land” is accomplished through the invalidation of the East. The dichotomy Occident/Orient is additionally highlighted by the portrayal of the characters: Taneal, the Babylon queen, represents the seductive and cruel version of the Oriental woman; Esperia, the virtuous queen, is the humble version of the Western woman. As we can easily perceive, the stereotypes created by the Greeks have remained until today, and cinema was one of the arts that was inspired by them.

      1.2.2 The Subversion of Roles: The Dilution of the Male/Female Binomial


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