As far as monsters go, the cannibal is likely the most historically, politically, socially significant figure of at least the last five to six centuries. It is the monster that has quite literally shaped the totality of modern society, the monster from which other monsters derive. โCannibal studies,โ as Vincent Woodard notes in The Delectable Negro: Human Consumption and Homoeroticism Within US Slave Culture, is, like all monster theories, an intensely incorporative endeavor: the composite of several disciplines ranging from Christian theology to postcolonial studies to queer theory (far less disparate subjects than one might think).
For the sake of clarity, homoeroticism in this context is to be understood as distinct from homosexuality in that, to use Woodardโs definition, it โimplies same-sex arousal and draws attention to those political, social, and libidinal forces that shape desire, and, ultimately, the homosexual act.โ In this use, itโs similar to Eve Sedgwickโs concept of homosocial desire and bonding which, she posits, with regard to cishet men, occurs through an act of triangulation involving an objectified feminine body. In horror, we see this perhaps most clearly in Dracula, wherein the conflict between the vampire and Van Helsing plays out through Mina, whose body becomes the literal vessel for their struggle.
When Woodard โcouplesโ homoeroticism with cannibalism and approaches this subject from an intersectional lens, he identifies how white homosocial bonding โย regardless of gender โ has been predicated on the consumptive desire of Black flesh, labor, and culture, and validates the numerous claims of white cannibalism leveraged by people of African descent across the diaspora for centuries. My point is not to say that all white people are cannibals; rather, that white supremacy as an ideology and framework through which one engages the world, is an ideology of cannibalistic compulsion, as is capitalist-patriarchy.
While the historicity of white cannibalism has obviously been repressed, Woodardโs exhaustive research reproduces many of these accounts which I wonโt include here (Sherronda J. Brownโs โThe History of Consumption and the Cannibalistic Nature of Whitenessโ is a great place to start). I do, however, want to make note of two separate but connected instances, to which both Brown and Woodard also refer. The lynchings of Nat Turner and Claude Neal occurred a century apart, in 1831 and 1934 respectively, but both included the ritualistic consumption of their flesh by white lynch mobs. In Nealโs case, this included forcible auto-cannibalism as well, the spectacle of which wasnโt enough to sate them, so they attempted to coerce Black members of the surrounding community to partake in these acts of consumption as well.
My purpose in reproducing these horrors is to call into question the oft-used metaphor of parasitism to describe imperialist white supremacist capitalist patriarchy within many branches of leftism. The parasite by definition sustains itself on organisms different from it. The cannibal, by contrast, consumes others explicitly like it; a rendering of The Swallowing predicated on sameness rather than difference. The metaphorical use of parasite, thus, works to affirm the distinctions propagated by eugenicist white supremacist race science which seeks to establish an imaginary speciesism, particularly through racial and sexual difference. When Woodard describes America and other imperialist states as โcannibal nation[s],โ it is to say that humans who desire power can only create and maintain said power through the perpetual consumption of other humans โย a consumption that occurs on planes spiritual, symbolic, material, and libidinal:
โWhen black Americans described instances of the eating, cooking, and consumption of flesh in slave narratives, newspaper articles, speeches, testimonials, sermons, and autobiographies, they not only questioned the national body politic but also tried to understand why and how they had become so delectable, so erotically appetizing, to a nation and white populace that, at least rhetorically, denied and despised their humanity.โ
Woodard frames this dissonance through the question, โโHow does it feel to be an edible, consumed object?โ In other words, how does it feel to be an energy source and foodstuff, to be consumed on the levels of body, sex, psyche, and soul?โ Which is all really to say, what does it mean to be cannibalized?
Brannon Hancockโs The Scandal of Sacramentality: The Eucharist in Literary and Theological Perspectives does a lot of work to illuminate the ideological sources of these impulses and their connection to Christianity as a tool of white supremacy. Here, he describes bodily consumption as โan act of communion based upon and evocative of love. Indeed, to take the body of another into oneself is the deepest form of human intimacy, and in this way, ritual cannibalism, even when the victim is an enemy, is a deeply sacred act.โ
What are the implications of this symbolism and interpretation with regard to the understandings of godliness, sovereignty, and power foundational to this countryโs formation and identity?? How does it interact with, say, the revisionist narratives around slaveownersโ supposed love for their slaves? Or abusersโ love for the people they abuse? Or how a CEO relates to their employees, or a politician to their constituency, or a celebrity to their fans? Or even how we create ourselves? If this is what it means to love, then it is as Simone Weil stated, that โWe love like cannibals.โ Except that โweโ is not universal, and these modes of relation donโt actually require a sacrificial negro to locate their pulse.
The Neon Demon, Jenniferโs Body, and Raw are all studies of specifically white femininities that use variations of homoerotic cannibalism to explore themes of gender formation, sexual formation, friendship, siblinghood, beauty, power, and feminine monstrosity; illustrative of Arabelle Sicardiโs thesis that โbeauty is terrorโ and Bhanu Kapilโs statement that โsex is always monstrous.โ While their depictions of The Swallowing can/are certainly read through a lens of queer desire and becoming, I wonder what we miss when we refuse to engage with their whiteness, and the compulsion toward cannibalism foundational to its ideology?
The Neon Demon (2016)
When Sicardi says that โbeauty is terror,โ it is to recognize that beauty is and has always been a tool of power. Always constructed, obfuscating, and often terrorizing, beauty is a weapon both offensive and defensive in nature. To address beauty as terror, thus, is a framework with far-reaching implications that lends itself well to analysis of projects like Nicolas Winding Refnโs The Neon Demon, obsessed as it is with a very specific type of beauty, the cannibalistic nature of the fashion and beauty industries as a whole, and the many terrorisms they can and do inspire.
Elle Fanning stars as sixteen-year-old Jesse, an orphan and aspiring model in Los Angeles. She meets makeup artist, Ruby (Jena Malone) at a photo shoot, who introduces her to fellow models, Sarah (Abbey Lee Kershaw) and Gigi (Bella Heathcote), otherwise known as โthe bionic womanโ for the plethora of cosmetic surgeries sheโs undergone. In one of the groupโs first interactions, Ruby disaffectedly muses about how, according to beauty companies, women are more likely to purchase lipstick shades whose names reference either food or sex. โBlack honey, plum passion, peachy keen,โ she recites, then turns to Jesse. โAre you food, or are you sex?โ
The question undercuts every interaction Jesse has throughout the film, from the photographer she sort of dates (Karl Glusman), to the manager of the scummy motel where she lives (Keanu Reeves), to her agent (Christina Hendricks), and every other industry professional, all of whom look at her and see โthat thingโ; the capacity โto walk into a room and itโs like in the middle of winter, youโre the sunโ; โnothing fake, nothing false. A diamond in a sea of glass.โ Often, the questionโs answer is that she is both food and sex, but mostly food. What they actually see is the unattainable. When a designer says of her, that โtrue beauty is the highest currency we have,โ Jesse internalizes this quite literally, and deepens her investment in her own beauty. She appears to miss the second part, when he says, โWithout it, sheโs nothing.โ
Everything about the poesy of the filmโs dialogue, the cameraโs gaze, its lighting and aesthetic choices, are designed to convince the audience to agree with this estimation of Jesse/Fanning as the most beautiful and beguiling creature to ever walk the earth. But is this so? Or is her body just long, impossibly thin, pubescent, and so white as to be almost translucent? That with only her eyes, she can flit between child-like helplessness (because she is a literal child in this film) and the intensity of Alexandre Cabanelโs โFallen Angelโ: a range and aesthetic that embodies the pinnacle of European white supremacist beauty standards. Why is it significant that Ruby canโt help but repeat how much she loves Jesseโs skin?
In her final soliloquy, Jesse takes ownership of her motherโs claim that she is โa dangerous girl.โ She says this in the knowledge that beauty like hers is exalted, unattainable, and therefore inspires both hatred and awe. She is fine with this, as in, she knows her beauty will be used to make others hate themselves and doesnโt care. She wants her body to be a site of homosocial desire and bonding for peers who covet and envy her, themselves misled by cultural conditioning that affirms the belief that beauty is capital which equates to power. Jesse recognizes this hunger in them, but critically underestimates the degree to which it also makes her a prey item. Or, as Sicardi puts it, โbeauty is dangerous because it trades in power, and power yields nothing without demand.โ
When Sarah and Gigi cannibalize her flesh, in one way, they showcase the impact of industries that thrive on the casual exploitation and consumption of real people. In an earlier scene, Gigi details a long list of surgical procedures she undergoes so she can โwear a ponytail,โ then declares, โBesides, nobody likes the way they look.โ Jesseโs reply, โI do,โ is the very quality that pushes homosocial desire into homoerotic cannibalism. By devouring her flesh, they hope to take her youth, beauty, its knowledge, currency, influence, and permission toward self-possession into themselves as sacred qualities.
Rubyโs consumption, however, is distinct. A necrophiliac, occultist, and classic predatory lesbian, she stokes competition between the three models in order to position herself as a safe place for Jesse, until her sexual advances are rejected โย at which point, Ruby eats her, bathes in her blood, lounges in her grave. Jesse is food, but sheโs also sex, or rather, sex as compulsive consumption.
It goes without saying that this is problematic representation (representing in fact, the limits of representation as a tool). If we recognize and accept that Rubyโs character is a vacuous trope that demonizes queerness, what does she in turn reveal about the mechanics of the white imagination? How does alignment between queerness and the predatory in turn cannibalize queer people, including those who are white?
Jenniferโs Body (2009)
The thing about Jennifer Check (Megan Fox) is that sheโs sort of amorphous as a monstrous figure. A succubus, a demon, a witch, a โcannibal psycho,โ a predatory bisexual top, and traumatized hot girl rape victim slut, all the many faces of the monstrous feminine coalesce in her body, the filmโs subject by title, though itโs her best friend, Needy (Amanda Seyfried) who acts as its narrator. This interplay between protagonist, subject, and object โ how the Hole reference is both double entendre and red herring โ illustrate the extreme homoeroticism that accounts for the totality of this movieโs subtext. If the queerness of Stokerโs Dracula is predicated on the eroticism inherent to patriarchal homosocial bonding, Jenniferโs Body is the precise inversion of this formula.
Folks will contest my situation of Jennifer within the lexicon of homoerotic cannibalism because, according to the film, she is transformed into a demon-possessed succubus, the result of a satanic ritual gone wrong. But this doesnโt really address the fact that Jenniferโs behavior and personality traits donโt actually change from one side of her transformation to the other โย they just become more literal. Jennifer is mean to Needy. Controlling and diminishing in ways itโs impossibly easy to confuse for camaraderie, particularly when youโre young. The power dynamics of their relationship were such that she was already feeding on Needy long before she decides to materially eat her. Further, the majority of the boys she chooses to eat in the interim are selected for reasons that, again, have more to do with Needy than any actual desire on Jenniferโs part.
Ahmet (Aman Johal), the only character of color, a foreign exchange student, is the first to be eaten the night of the fire / rape / ritual / transformation. But prior, Jennifer goes to Needyโs house, an encounter that culminates in a very sexual scene in which Jennifer, flesh-hungry, pushes Needy up against a wall, takes deep breaths of her, then runs out into the night. To Jennifer, this refusal demonstrates her love for Needy, but sheโs still hungry so she hunts Ahmet instead. Before she eats him, she asks, โDoes anyone know youโre alive?โ a double entendre of a question that speaks to conditions of social death existent at intersections of race, ethnicity, citizenry, and nationality, and which points to her consumption of him as being distinctly racialized.
Jonas (Josh Emerson) comes next, the jock whose best friend โ Jenniferโs former fuck-buddy โ died in the fire. Then Colin (Kyle Gallner), the emo goth kid from Needyโs writing class who Jennifer shows precisely zero interest in until Needy claims heโs โa really cool guyโ โย a statement that spurns an immediate one-eighty response from Jennifer. She invites him out that night and eats him (his body later described as โlasagna with teethโ), a scene that cuts between Jennifer feeding and Needy having awkward, distracted sex with Chip (Johnny Simmons), her dumb boyfriend, while telepathically tuned into her bestieโs shenanigans. The subtext is that Jennifer satiates her desire for Needy, either by eating boys Needy approves of, or who in some way recall their relationship; that when she consumes their flesh, she is, in a way, feeding on Needyโs admiration to achieve a literally transcendent form (a transcendence that, in the beginning, was merely implied through the filter of Needyโs desirous perception).
The specific cannibalism she exemplifies can be encapsulated in Simone Weilโs observation that we love others โas food for ourselves,โ an impulse that, when fed, makes us โlove like cannibals.โ It also exemplifies toxic white femininity in action, predicated on โlov[ing] only what one can eat,โ or rather, what is palatable. When Needy interrogates Jennifer โ โwhat do you mean, โwhen youโre full?โโ โ Jenniferโs immediate response is to gaslight her with suggestive threats questioning her mental health and acuity. Their conflict culminates in Jenniferโs decision to manipulate, seduce, and eat Chip, which goes far beyond her need for substantiation, evidenced when she instructs him to โsay Iโm better than Needy.โ
Itโs not that Needy arouses her, itโs being perceived as โbetterโ than Needy that arouses her; the conquest of it. Which, of course, has more nutritional value, shall we say, from the mouth of someone who loves her. Jenniferโs โman-eatingโ cannibalistic behavior stems from what seems like and can certainly be read as homoerotic desire but can also be read as predicated on sourcing a sense of power and superiority from the body of another โย and what does that sound like?
The big unanswerable question of this film, for me, is not whether Needy loves Jennifer โย that much is obvious. Itโs whether Jennifer loves Needy or if she just loves that she knows and can rely on the fact that Needy loves her? When Needy narrates wistfully at the beginning that โsandbox love never dies,โ what does that mean as currency and consumable? What does it mean as power?
Raw (2016)
The first thing we learn about Justine (Garance Marillier) and her family is that theyโre vegetarians. The second, that theyโre veterinarians. The film opens with Justineโs arrival at veterinary school, her parentsโ alma mater where, despite their legacy and the presence of her older sister, Alex (Ella Rumpf), she struggles to fit into the hedonistic party culture of the campus during rush week. As part of an indoctrination (hazing) ritual, Alex essentially force feeds her raw rabbit kidney, from which a severe rash develops. Then the hunger starts.
Raw is unique among these three because the cannibalism it depicts is not only homoerotic and homosocial in nature, but also incestuous. The first human flesh Justine tastes is that of her sister, whom she spends the earlier parts of the film making futile attempts to connect with โย until they find common ground in their particular appetites. Unlike the other films, Justineโs consumption bonds them, even as their relationship dynamic becomes increasingly tempestuous with her changing temperament. Justine undergoes a complete transformation over the course of the week into someone considerably more bestial.
The filmโs body horror is one thing, but writer-director Julia Ducournauโs obsession seems more so in ponderance of the boundaries between the human and animal. In the natural world, cannibalism is scientifically common. Itโs also common within human civilizations, even as we pretend it isnโt, even as its practice is naturalized through structural power. The feminine cannibals in Raw trouble the entire category of the human as distinct, separate, and apart from the rest of the natural world, the presumption on which all of human civilization is constructed.
In an early cafeteria scene, a student raises the question, โIf you treat a monkey in a zoo or African reserve, are you as careful as a doctor during normal surgery?โ We are, of course, to presume that by โnormal,โ he means โhuman.โ The question is whether animals deserve the same level of care as human beings โย but doesnโt stop there. The subject then turns to bestiality and its experience from the perspective of the animal. โLegally, Iโm not sure โmonkey rapeโ exists,โ Justineโs roommate and friend, Adrien (Rabah Nait Oufella) says, to which she responds, โSure it does. Animals have rightsโฆ I bet a raped monkey suffers like a woman.โ
The philosophical, moral, and ethical question Justine raises about the value of animal life is really a question of sovereignty: whether or not one believes the sovereignty of living beings is to be inherently valued and respected. Generally speaking, we are taught to value human life above anything else โย except that we donโt. And particularly not if it requires the denial of cravings for comfort and luxury, even if the experience of said luxury is entirely parasocial.
Human sovereignty is created through subjugation of the natural world, which is why the quickest way to devalue a person is to equate them with an animal. The questions of care, of โmonkey rape,โ and whether a raped monkey suffers, are questions white people have wondered out loud about Black and Indigenous people โ and particularly those with marginalized gender and sexual identities โ for centuries. What are we to make of the fact that France, the colonial power from which Ducournau hails, refuses to reimburse Haiti for the capital collected as โrepaymentโ for the โtheftโ of โproperty,โ i.e. human beings? What are we to make of the United Statesโ refusal to pay reparations? Or Jeff Bezosโ refusal to pay taxes (and his desire to secure Amazon as a monopoly)? Or the Kardashiansโ consumption of Black culture (but also Black womenโs bodies)? How is any of this not cannibalism?
At the end of Raw, we discover that Justine and Alex inherited their cannibalism from their mother, explanation for her rigid vegetarianism. If we move beyond the monstrous feminine, what are the implications of this choice when we recognize the nuclear family structure as a creation of white supremacist capitalist patriarchy? And what does it reveal about what it means to love within the white imagination?