<The Camel and the Arab> is about inhabitants’ vigilance against outsiders. The person “I”, who is educated and urbanized, feels uncomfortable about migrant workers or outsiders. The migrant worker makes various attempts, though trivial, to take root in a new world, which causes the person “I” to feel threatened. In the context, the film raises a possibility: inhabitants’ vigilant attitude towards outsiders might be rooted in self-doubt or inherent anxiety a...
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<The Camel and the Arab> is about inhabitants’ vigilance against outsiders. The person “I”, who is educated and urbanized, feels uncomfortable about migrant workers or outsiders. The migrant worker makes various attempts, though trivial, to take root in a new world, which causes the person “I” to feel threatened. In the context, the film raises a possibility: inhabitants’ vigilant attitude towards outsiders might be rooted in self-doubt or inherent anxiety about fragility of their existence.
<The Camel and the Arab> is about uncomfortable relationship between dwellers and migrant worker that is seen from the standpoint of inhabitants
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