Resisting James Bond
Power and Privilege in the Daniel Craig Era
Edited by Lisa Funnell and Christoph Lindner
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Beginning with Casino Royale (2006) and ending with No Time to Die (2021), the Daniel Craig era of James Bond films coincides with the rise of various justice movements challenging deeply entrenched systems of inequality and oppression, ranging from sexism, racism, and immigration to 2SLGBTQIA+ rights, reproductive justice and climate change. While focus is often placed on individual actions and institutional policies and practices, it is important to recognize the role that culture plays within these systems. Mainstream film is not simply 'mindless' entertainment but a key part of a global cultural industry that naturalizes and normalizes power structures.
Engaging with these issues, Resisting James Bond is a multidisciplinary collection that explores inequality and oppression in the world of 007 through a range of critical and theoretical approaches. The chapters explore the embodiment and disembodiment of power and privilege across the formal, narrative, cultural and geopolitical elements that define the revisionist-reversionist world of Daniel Craig's Bond.
About the authors:
Lisa Funnell is Associate Dean of Creative Industries at Mohawk College, Canada.Christoph Lindner is Professor of Urban Studies at University College London, UK.
Press Reviews:
"An interrogative, urgent edition to the expanding field of Bond scholarship, Lisa Funnell and Christoph Lindner's Resisting James Bond takes the Daniel Craig oeuvre as a whole and offers an overarching yet thoroughly comprehensive take on the actor's five-film tenure vis a vis a number of original and inventive chapter topics. A rare scholarly treat." ―Ian Kinane, General Editor, International Journal of James Bond Studies, University of Roehampton, UK
"This is a thought-provoking collection which, in challenging the identification of mainstream cinema with mindless entertainment, delves deep into the problematic representation of social injustice and oppression within the longest franchise in film history. Re-assessing James Bond's Craig era against the global rise of social and political unrest of the first two decades of the twenty-first century, the collection's interdisciplinary essays interrogate the power structures embodied by the world's most iconic fictional secret agent at a crucial moment in the 007 series." ―Monica Germanà, Reader in Gothic and Contemporary Studies at the University of Westminster, UK
See the publisher website: Bloomsbury Academic
> From the same authors:
Global James Bond (2023)
(Re)Imagining and Transplanting a Popular Culture Icon
Dir. Lisa Funnell and Klaus Dodds
Subject: One Film > James Bond
Screening #MeToo (2022)
Rape Culture in Hollywood
Dir. Lisa Funnell and Ralph Beliveau
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American and Chinese-Language Cinemas (2017)
Examining Cultural Flows
Dir. Lisa Funnell and Man-Fung Yip
Transnational Asian Identities in Pan-Pacific Cinemas (2015)
The Reel Asian Exchange
Dir. Philippa Gates and Lisa Funnell
Revisioning 007 (2010)
James Bond and Casino Royale
Dir. Christoph Lindner
Subject: One Film > Casino Royale
> On a related topic:
James Bond Will Return (2024)
Critical Perspectives on the 007 Film Franchise
Dir. Claire Hines, Terence McSweeney and Stuart Joy
Subject: One Film > James Bond
Bond, James Bond (2022)
Exploring the Shaken and Stirred History of Ian Fleming's 007
by Brad Gilmore and Mike Kalinowski
Subject: One Film > James Bond
James Bond and Popular Culture (2014)
Essays on the Influence of the Fictional Superspy
Dir. Michele Brittany
Subject: One Film > James Bond
The Bondian Cold War (2024)
The Transnational Legacy of a Cultural Icon
Dir. Martin D. Brown, Ronald J. Granieri and Muriel Blaive
Subject: One Film > James Bond
Love and Let Die (2023)
Bond, the Beatles and the British Psyche
by John Higgs
Subject: One Film > James Bond