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ID131545
Title ProperSuperheroes in Hong Kong's political resistance
Other Title Informationicons, images, and opposition
LanguageENG
AuthorGarrett, Dan
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In June 2013, explosive claims and illicit revelations of domestic and global American intelligence surveillance operations, hacking, and collaboration with US Internet and information technology behemoths rocked the world. Simultaneously, the mysterious emergence in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) of runaway American intelligence contractor Edward J. Snowden at the heart of the intrigue shoved the small enclave to the fore of global geopolitics. Claiming to rely on Hong Kong's respect for the rule of law and tradition of dissent to shield him against American retaliation and extradition, the dubious protagonist's statements ingratiated himself to local political groups who petitioned Hong Kong and central Chinese governments not to send him back to the United States. During "Defend Snowden" demonstrations at the US consulate in Hong Kong involving hundreds of supporters, placards bearing the image of US President Barack Obama parodied, mocked, and ridiculed the leader of the free world using iconic adaptations of Captain America, George Orwell's "Big Brother," and Shepard Fairey's Obama "Hope" visuals. Instead of an icon of "American freedom and ideology" (Serwer 2008) and an "idealized American nation" (Dittmer 2005, 627) Captain America, American president Barack Obama, and the United States of America were symbolically transformed into a signified Orwellian caped crusader threatening the world.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Science and Politics Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2014: p.112-119
Journal SourcePolitical Science and Politics Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2014: p.112-119
Key WordsGlobal American Intelligence Surveillance Operations ;  Hacking ;  United States ;  Hong Kong ;  Hong Kong Special Administrative Region ;  Edward Snowden ;  Global Geopolitics ;  Barack Obama