Despite Smith's popularity with audiences, together with the on-screen product placement and off-screen promotion of fashion brands such as Ray-Ban, Puma, Belstaff and Converse, the intersection of Smith, black masculinity and fashion does not appear to have been the subject of extended academic attention. Building on existing critical work on costume, identity and cinema (Bruzzi, Church Gibson, Gilligan), the article forms part of my wider research project, which includes a forthcoming monograph, that responds to calls for further interdisciplinary work exploring the ‘new nexus’ of film, fashion and consumption that has emerged as cinema ever increasingly ‘bleeds across’ different media (Church Gibson 2008, 2010). Through comparative analysis with examples drawn from photography, I argue that Smith’s representation enables the black body to be rendered as fashionable and aspirational, rather than simply objectified via sexualised visual discourses. "The article examines the ways in which the representation of Will Smith in I am Legend and I, Robot constructs post-colonial performative visual narratives that both follow and disrupt existing discourses of sexualised black masculinity within visual culture.
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