Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 2, Summer 2010 | Page 94

90 Popular Culture Review and the concept of ethnicity as designated as difference is essentially meaningless. As the foreign is everything that is “not I,” and I do not even know myself, everything is foreign and the concept is thus void. Or, I can argue the complications between genre and ethnicity consistently invert and subvert themselves to the point at which meaning is nonexistent. There is only meaningless intertextuality and surface connections. I may cite Ezra Pound with a simple “I cannot make it cohere.” But these all seem like cop outs. What I can say is that the murders of dozens of Japanese sword fighters, Oren Ishii, her mother, her father, Boss Tanaka, Vemita Green, Budd, Pai Mei, a groom-to-be, three friends of the wedding couple, a Texan reverend and his wife, a piano player, one hospital worker named Buck “who is here to Fuck,” his one client, and Bill are graphic, violent, and painful. Yet, death, particularly when administered by the hands of Beatrix Kiddo, is usually associated with honor and obligation. And for those enemies who are most worthy, there is regret, loss, and mourning. Their deaths are never meaningless. Columbia College Chicago Works Cited Heather Momyer Boelhower, William Q. Through a Glass Darkly: Ethnic Semiosis in American Literature. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987. Hogue, W. Lawrence. Race, Modernity, Postmodernity: A Look at the History and the Literature of People of Color Since 1960s. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996. Kaminsky, Stuart M. “Kung Fu Film as Ghetto Myth.” Movies as Artifacts: Cultural Criticism of Popular Film. Eds. Michael T. Marsden, John G. Nachbar, and Sam L. Grogg, Jr. Chicago: Nelson Hall, 1982. 137-145. Kill Bill: Volume 1. Dir. Quentin Tarantino. Perf. Uma Thurman, Lucy Liu, Vivica A. Fox, Daryl Hannah, and David Carradine. Miramax, 2003. Kill Bill: Volume 2. Dir. Quentin Tarantino. Perf. Uma Thurman, Michael Madsen, Daryl Hannah, and David Carradine. Miramax, 2004. Newitz, Annalee. “Magical Girls and Atomic Bomb Sperm: Japanese Animation in America.” Film Quarterly. 49.1 (1995): 2-15. Price, Shinobu. “Cartoons from Another Planet: Japanese Animation as Cross-Cultural Communication.” Journal of American & Comparative Cultures. 24.1&2 (2001): 153-169.