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OtherSociology's profile
Dr Zuleyka Zevallos
Dr Zuleyka Zevallos
Dr Zuleyka Zevallos
@OtherSociology

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Dr Zuleyka Zevallos

@OtherSociology

Applied sociologist. Latin-Australian on Gadigal land. #Intersectionality, equity & diversity. Founder @sociologyatwork. Co-manage @STEMWomen & @ScienceOnGoogle

Sydney, New South Wales
othersociologist.com
Joined May 2009

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    1. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Hegemonic masculinity reflects how some representations of masculinity win out over other expressions of manhood. Film (and other cultural insitutions, like sport) assert narrow ideas of what it means to be 'a man.' Joker dresses up Arthur's escalating violence as emancipationpic.twitter.com/4jBmQMAhqS

      17 replies 41 retweets 259 likes
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    2. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Environmentalism is one example of anti-hegemonic masculinity. The movement preaches (though does not easily achieve) gender equality (cf https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/academic-professional/sociology/Masculinities-RW-Connell-9781741145199 …) Weeks after global climate change protests, there is still an audience keen to cheer Arthur's destruction & misogynypic.twitter.com/BkLH865GDn

      13 replies 12 retweets 161 likes
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    3. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Can you be an environmentalist & still enjoy Joker? Yes! But as bell hooks tells us, we can enjoy films but remain critical. Let's continue Arthur fixates on Sophie, to 'humanise' the character. The interactions are examples of gender violence, but not presented this waypic.twitter.com/uwPXhhADzp

      10 replies 23 retweets 222 likes
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    4. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      *Spoiler* Arthur stalks Sophie. She's coquettish in response. Sophie is a single mum, but she's seen making herself available to Arthur for sex (after he's killed), & taking care of his emotions. The interactions play on the audience, but the film excuses this as mental illnesspic.twitter.com/NbYWnBhmG4

      77 replies 16 retweets 164 likes
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    5. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      *Spoiler* Arthur kills Penny after finding out that: 1/ Due to mental illness, she believed Thomas Wayne was his father; 2/ he was actually adopted; 3/ she was a victim of intimate partner violence and "allowed" Arthur to be physically abused by the same man. Misogyny rulespic.twitter.com/dBHwG2xp6M

      25 replies 12 retweets 197 likes
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    6. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Joker relies on a dangerous misogynist trope; that women 'lie' about pregnancy for financial gain. Actually, misattributed parentage occurs in 1% of cases, mostly due to complex relationships, not money (https://tapri.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/v13n2_1gilding.pdf …) Still, Penny deserves to die by this logicpic.twitter.com/bcbh1IbsA2

      37 replies 22 retweets 216 likes
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    7. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      44 women have been killed in Australia in 2019 (https://www.facebook.com/notes/destroy-the-joint/counting-dead-women-australia-2019-we-count-every-known-death-due-to-violence-ag/2582150351832693/ …). 5 women in 1 week (https://womensagenda.com.au/latest/five-women-were-murdered-in-australia-in-seven-days/ …) 1/3 of women experience emotional abuse by a partner & 1/4 sexual and intimate partner violence (https://theconversation.com/study-confirms-intimate-partner-violence-leading-health-risk-factor-for-women-67772 …) How is Joker an 'anti-hero' for us?pic.twitter.com/DVUvYXEkg7

      29 replies 21 retweets 198 likes
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    8. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Joker presents Arthur as an 'every man' whose poverty demands justice. It demotes Black women to stereotypes (https://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/lets-talk-about-the-black-women-in-joker_n_5d9605dae4b0da7f6622abc7?ri18n=true …) Above all, Joker inverts gender & race in its 'social commentary.' Black women in USA & Australia are central to civil movements. Not in Jokerpic.twitter.com/X1Fw9sVUbA

      15 replies 25 retweets 229 likes
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    9. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 4
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      Joker re-imagines that a White man can lead social revolution, when it's actually Black women who've been at the forefront of social movements before, during and after, the 1970s context of the film In Joker, Black women are passive & unlikeable subjects so that Arthur can risepic.twitter.com/chAO7dxqIU

      38 replies 61 retweets 346 likes
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    10. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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      Joker contrives White heroism, so that non-Indigenous people in Newtown clap, while oblivious of Aboriginal women heroes, like Dulcie Flower (http://bit.ly/Dulcie_Flower ), Coleen Shirley Perry Smith (pic, http://bit.ly/Mum_Shirl ), Ruby Langford Ginibi (http://bit.ly/Langford_Ginibi )pic.twitter.com/9jRnijE5kY

      Mum Shirl is pictured from the waist up, in a black and white photo. She is holding a flyer. Other Aboriginal activists stand behind her
      8 replies 22 retweets 237 likes
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      Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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      Arthur rages against 'the system' which has cut off funding to his mental healthcare in fictional Gotham. Yesterday, as we watched this film in Australia, poor & disabled people were subjected to renewed calls to shrink our public healthcare, via tax breaks to employers.🤡pic.twitter.com/26R2cbLW3v

      12:14 AM - 5 Oct 2019
      • 12 Retweets
      • 181 Likes
      • savascha Jazmin Scare-lett 🎃 sita itati ‘la muy espooky' VCS Kelly Wilz DeaconFATAL Andrew Dalby опоссум Alex Samaras
      5 replies 12 retweets 181 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Joker relies heavily on ableism. Arthur suffers from uncontrollable laughter (pseudobulbar affect, also refers to spontaenous crying). Colleagues & strangers make fun of him. But this is just a set-up to excuse his violence, reproducing the stereotype that mental illness=violencepic.twitter.com/mqoG1LRYc7

          11 replies 44 retweets 287 likes
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        3. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Sexist ableism: Penny, who is a White woman, is mentally ill AND physically disabled. She's snuffed out to unburden Arthur as his carer & push his re-birth as Joker Audiences cheer Arthur's metamorphosis, as he transcends disability, used to selectively excuse violent White menpic.twitter.com/RMEHHNL1a0

          20 replies 21 retweets 204 likes
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        4. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Back to the cheering Newtown audience: our nation's apathy for disabled people is epic, especially Aboriginal people who suffer most due to under-resourcing & institutional violence Would we clap for Others? Of course not. Disability is a prop to celebrate White men's hedonismpic.twitter.com/4PaMkvBt23

          3 replies 15 retweets 179 likes
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        5. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Joker director, Todd Phillips, claims he was driven from making comedies due to 'woke culture.' Origins to this term is appropriation of Black activism & subsequent backlash (esp White men), who feel *aggrieved entitlement* to be sexist, racist, ableist, transphobic & homophobicpic.twitter.com/xMQkXbdIYO

          7 replies 32 retweets 245 likes
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        6. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          In light of Phillips' comments, Joker's pretence to class liberation is exposed as the same brand of nihilism fueling incel (involuntary celibate) ideology (https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2019/10/joker-todd-phillips.html …). Which is to say, this film is really just old-fashioned patriarchy rehashed as 'resistance.'🤡pic.twitter.com/4Kj3THHzqK

          6 replies 37 retweets 278 likes
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        7. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          When Joker begins, we see protesters holding 'RESIST' signs - an allusion to anti-Trump protests in 2017. However the film ends with Joker's sycophants holding RESIST signs upside down. White patriarchy's co-opting of social protest, centring White violence, wins in the endpic.twitter.com/pimSvCVLKU

          7 replies 25 retweets 192 likes
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        8. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Joker is entertaining. I've unpacked dynamics showing why the film is far from transformative cinema, as some White critics claim. E.g. See comparisons to 'Get Out'⬇️, showing how White people are eager to assimilate Black excellence, esp in a film that undervalues Black womenpic.twitter.com/XMu9TIKfFB

          9 replies 26 retweets 224 likes
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        9. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Then there's the fact that the film evokes New York - which is 27.5% Latin, 25% Black, 12% Asian, among Others - but a White man is elevated to protest warrior 🤡 Joaquin Phoenix's performance is as commanding as everyone has been raving, BUT his portrayal is not without issuespic.twitter.com/cK49MGsisS

          24 replies 11 retweets 169 likes
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        10. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Phoenix is very talented & could've rendered a profound performance if Arthur had simply been an angry, isolated man. But he was portrayed as disabled to give the filmmaker license on his violence, banking on accolade given to able-bodied actors using disability to gain sympathypic.twitter.com/PnNsZfEVRD

          14 replies 16 retweets 192 likes
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        11. Dr Zuleyka Zevallos‏ @OtherSociology Oct 5
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          Enjoy the film - I did, to a point - but don't mistake it as social commentary. It speaks only to White men who think the world owes them free reign; invites able-bodied people to cheer for caricatures of disability; & dresses up patriarchy as liberation. Joker does nothing newpic.twitter.com/7v9JruegwA

          412 replies 156 retweets 612 likes
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        12. End of conversation
        1. Uriel Malváez‏ @the_soulbearer Oct 7
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          Replying to @OtherSociology

          This was used in the movie as a driving force. He couldn't get his medication, so he fell into madness. A society that didn't give a damn about him and his condition is the same one that created the monster known as Joker.

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
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        1. Coach_DD‏ @dpd_hbk Oct 7
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          Replying to @OtherSociology

          it's about a villian from Batman

          0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
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        1. Carl‏ @DogDiogenes Oct 6
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          Replying to @OtherSociology

          That affects everyone negatively, including the 90% white demographic.

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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