Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films

This article apprehends a precarious moment when the queer and the tropics coincide to form a new fabric of sensing in this age of climate crisis. Queer and tropics are intimate, not only because both embody their inherent openness and fluidity, but also because each is woven closely by the corollar...

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Main Author: Claros, Ian Harvey A.
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2024
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/120
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/filipino-faculty-pubs/article/1119/viewcontent/claros_post_haiyan_short_films_philippines.pdf
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.filipino-faculty-pubs-11192024-09-23T07:53:03Z Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films Claros, Ian Harvey A. This article apprehends a precarious moment when the queer and the tropics coincide to form a new fabric of sensing in this age of climate crisis. Queer and tropics are intimate, not only because both embody their inherent openness and fluidity, but also because each is woven closely by the corollary contradictions that besiege them, such as heteronormativity, capitalism, and environmental degradation. Within such an intersecting framework, this study critically engages with a selection of three works by the queer Filipino filmmaker Panx Solajes who attentively observes the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan (locally called Yolanda) in the Philippines, a tropical storm that occurred in 2013, and is still considered to be one of the strongest in modern records. Solajes’ post-typhoon films Balud (2014), Iskwater (2015), and Himurasak (2015) are experiments in the troubled tropics that configure a queer vision to engender a habitable and inclusive future through a coupling of human and nonhuman subjectivities. Thus, this post-Haiyan filmography relies on unconventional and resistant forms of queer visibilities that respond to the current climate crisis. Such filmic reading, therefore, can best emerge through allied histories of queer studies, the tropics, and the environment to harness discursive turns that offer alternatives from rigidly pessimistic and realist horizons of the future. This study commits to render visible a balance between the duty to remember and the agency to imagine a habitable future in this equatorial zone of the earth. 2024-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/120 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/filipino-faculty-pubs/article/1119/viewcontent/claros_post_haiyan_short_films_philippines.pdf Filipino Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Panx Solajes’ Films Philippine Cinema Queer Ecology Troubled Tropics Typhoon Haiyan Typhoon Yolanda Arts and Humanities Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Film and Media Studies Queer Studies
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Panx Solajes’ Films
Philippine Cinema
Queer Ecology
Troubled Tropics
Typhoon Haiyan
Typhoon Yolanda
Arts and Humanities
Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Film and Media Studies
Queer Studies
spellingShingle Panx Solajes’ Films
Philippine Cinema
Queer Ecology
Troubled Tropics
Typhoon Haiyan
Typhoon Yolanda
Arts and Humanities
Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Film and Media Studies
Queer Studies
Claros, Ian Harvey A.
Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
description This article apprehends a precarious moment when the queer and the tropics coincide to form a new fabric of sensing in this age of climate crisis. Queer and tropics are intimate, not only because both embody their inherent openness and fluidity, but also because each is woven closely by the corollary contradictions that besiege them, such as heteronormativity, capitalism, and environmental degradation. Within such an intersecting framework, this study critically engages with a selection of three works by the queer Filipino filmmaker Panx Solajes who attentively observes the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan (locally called Yolanda) in the Philippines, a tropical storm that occurred in 2013, and is still considered to be one of the strongest in modern records. Solajes’ post-typhoon films Balud (2014), Iskwater (2015), and Himurasak (2015) are experiments in the troubled tropics that configure a queer vision to engender a habitable and inclusive future through a coupling of human and nonhuman subjectivities. Thus, this post-Haiyan filmography relies on unconventional and resistant forms of queer visibilities that respond to the current climate crisis. Such filmic reading, therefore, can best emerge through allied histories of queer studies, the tropics, and the environment to harness discursive turns that offer alternatives from rigidly pessimistic and realist horizons of the future. This study commits to render visible a balance between the duty to remember and the agency to imagine a habitable future in this equatorial zone of the earth.
format text
author Claros, Ian Harvey A.
author_facet Claros, Ian Harvey A.
author_sort Claros, Ian Harvey A.
title Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
title_short Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
title_full Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
title_fullStr Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
title_full_unstemmed Queering the Troubled Tropics in Panx Solajes’ Post-Haiyan Short Films
title_sort queering the troubled tropics in panx solajes’ post-haiyan short films
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2024
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/filipino-faculty-pubs/120
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/filipino-faculty-pubs/article/1119/viewcontent/claros_post_haiyan_short_films_philippines.pdf
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