Title: Difference, Identity and Representation: Communication and Spectatorship
1Difference, Identity and RepresentationCommunica
tion and Spectatorship
- Anneka Smelik "Feminist Film Theory
- Laura Mulvey, Visual Pleasure and Narrative
Cinema, Movies and Methods vol. II, 1985, pp.
303-315. - bell hooks, The Oppositional Gaze, Black Looks,
1992, pp. 115-131.
2Gender and Media
- What do we mean by gender?
- Do films construct or reflect gender?
Early Feminist Critiques
- Early criticism focused on stereotypes of women
and their negative impact on female spectators - Advocated for corrective positive images of
women.
3Structural Theory and Psychoanalysis
- The early 1970s Claire Johnston was one of the
first to draw on semiotics and Lacanian
psychoanalysis suggesting - Cinema provides a male myth of woman
- Woman in classical cinema serve as an empty
sign exchanged by men the object rather than
the subject of desire. - Johnston was critical of Hollywood cinema, but
also saw it as an important site for study and
intervention. - She called for an alternative narrative cinema.
4Structural Theory and Psychoanalysis
- Together these two frameworks provide film
theorists with ways for thinking about how the
viewer as a subject participates in the meaning
of the film. - Semiotics--theory of signs. A tool for analyzing
how meaning is produced through language and
ideology. - Psychoanalytic theory. A theory of the subject as
constituted through sexual difference.
5Laura Mulvey
- Film Theorist, Media Scholar, Filmmaker
- Great Britain (1941 - )
- Feminist Film Studies
- "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema - 1975
- Psychoanalysis, Semiotics
- Sustained dialog on how sexual difference is
reproduced in the act of watching classical
cinema - 30s, 40s, 50s - Fascination of cinema
- She argues women have been placed in a specific,
powerless position in cinema. - How does the cinematic system actively, and
passively, make this so?
Rear Window (1954), Alfred Hitchcock
6Mulveys key example Alfred Hitchcock
- Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958
- Alfred Hitchcock - 1899-1980, The Master of
Suspense, Rear Window (1954), and Psycho (1960)
7- Representation of women as an aspect of visual
pleasure - Cinema reproduces gendered subjects
- Men active Women passive
- You are positioned as spectator when you identify
with the characters - Positioning of camera, lightning, the roles, all
decisions set up positions you thought about
yourself as the one looking and not being looked
at.
8- Psychoanalytic theory as it is related to film
culture this is not about psychoanalyzing
characters, but mechanisms of viewing, this is,
spectatorship. - More than the act of looking, the gaze is a
viewing relationship, characteristic of a
particular set of social circumstances - Even if it was wrong, it influenced a body of
work that was very influential - Hypothesis psychoanalysis semiotics
understanding film - Analysis does not have to always be tied up to
economy or class
Vetigo
Jimmy Stewart as Jeffries in Rear Window
9- Psychoanalysis - Freud
- Conscious / Pre-Conscious / Unconscious
- Repression
- Id / Ego / Superego
- Interrelation of Individual/Society/Biology
- Talking Cure Bring into the consciousness what
is making the patient suffer
Sigmund Freud
- Model of Psychosexual development
- Individual - Civilization
- Libido develops by changing its object
Sublimation - Stages - Oedipus complex
10- Key theoretical figures she is in dialogue with
- Louis Althusser - Sigmund Freud - Jacques Lacan
- The State apparatus as a set of cultural
institutions - Althusser the ideal spectator, the text and
interpellation it demands a particular type of
spectator. - There is no true subject you are always product
of social relations - there is always the
possibility of psychosis.
Louis Althusser
11- Feminist theorists present Freuds model of the
unconscious and sexuality as accurate description
of the place of women in the phallogocentric
culture--not as a necessary or natural condition,
but one specific to contemporary society. - The unconscious shapes cinematic practices
- Male pleasure, dominant pleasure
- Male ambivalence toward the female figure leads
toward extreme positions - to devalue, punish,
save her, or to make a pedestal figure, a fetish
out of her.
12- The conflict is resolved through one of two ways
-
-
Sadistic narrative woman must be punished
(usually death or marriage) Fetishism woman
serves as polished phallic object (denial) the
ideal of perfect beauty. Female lure and a
threat of castration - she lacks a penis - Lacan
13- Lacan mirror stage
- Formative of the I
- Permanent structure of subjectivity
- Paradigm of the imaginary order
- Dual relationship
- Body - Ego
- Imaginary - Real
- Fragmentation - Wholeness
- IDENTIFICATION with the image
Jacques Lacan
Entering into the symbolic language Real /
Symbolic / Imaginary
14- In cinema, the spectator is made to identify with
the male look because the camera films from the
optical, as well as libidinal, pint of view of
the male character. - Three Looks
- The characters in the film look at each other
- The viewer looks at the screen
- The camera looks at the event being filmed.
- Mulvey aims to disrupt pleasure
- Analysis / New Cinema
Hitchcock--as voyeur
Grace Kelly as Lisa
15- Pleasure functions in two ways
- Scopophilia pleasure in looking at objects
(voyeuristic gaze) - Narcissism identification with on screen (male)
protagonist as a controlling figure. - Within the patriarchal order, women are the
other the empty object through which identity
is constructed. This becomes problematic for
womens identity. - This is where the idea of the women becoming an
object in the film arises.
16A Feminist Counter-Cinema
- Mulvey advocates for an alternative Cinema. One
that doesnt adhere to narrative representational
conventions. - Feminist filmmaking - must deconstruct and
destroy the gaze - Destroy the satisfaction, pleasure and privilege.
- Employs techniques of distanciation (limiting
identification). - Why not just have active female protagonists?
(The gaze is masculine within patriarchal logic.)
17A Feminist Counter-Cinema
- Why not just have active female protagonists?
- The gaze is not essentially male, 'but to own and
activate the gaze, given our language and the
structure of the unconscious, is to be in the
"masculine" position' - The gaze is masculine within the terms of
patriarchal culture.
18- Challenges and critiques
- Is her argument complicit with normative
heterosexual order? - Other forms of spectatorship?
- How can she deny forms of female spectatorial
pleasure in cinema? - Do men see women as representing their castrated
selves? What other psychoanalytic models are
available? - Does the emphasis on psychoanalysis overemphasize
the binary of gender? How do we reconcile other
forms of identity and difference?
19Films with women protagonists
- Mary Anne Doane and others began to consider the
female spectator in relation to the Womans
Film (during the 1940s there were many films
that featured female protagonists targeting
female audiences). - A Letter to Three Wives, Joseph Mankiewicz, 1949
- Gentleman Prefer Blondes, Howard Hawks, 1953
20bell hooks
- Theorist, activists, feminist
- Substance of the books, not the I (1952 - )
- Aint I a Woman? Black Women and Feminism -
1981
21- The Oppositional Gaze
- Political dimension of the Gaze
- Power Stuart Hall - Hegemony
- Agency awareness / looking to resist
- Television - negation of Black representation
- Manthia Diawara Rupture
- Critical Discussion
Manthia Diawara
Lena Horne
22- Looking too deep hurt - Black women and cinema
- Mulvey woman as image, man as bearer of the
look - Mainstream feminist film criticism ignores Black
women - Women effaces differences in specific
socio-historical contexts
1986
23- Connection between the realm of representation
in mass media and the capacity of black women to
construct ourselves as subjects in daily life
(p. 127) - Is there a black female gaze? Essentialist notion
- Trinh T. Minh-ha subjectivity does not merely
consist in talking about oneself be this talking
indulgent or critical - Not offering diverse representations, but
imagining transgressive possibilities for the
formulation of identity
Trinh T. Minh-ha
Sankofa Passion of Remembrance 1986
24Recent Feminist Film Theory
- Female spectatorship and masquerade
- Gender as performed
- Gender is problematic / wonderful / complex
- Oppositional Viewing
- Psychoanalytic theory becomes less monolithic as
discussions move beyond the binary of
masculine/feminine gender and address other
aspects of identity (race, age, ability, etc) - After the 1980s an increase in films by women
directors and with complex representations of
gender and sexuality - An Angel at My Table, Jane Campion, 1989
- Things You Can Tell by Just Looking at Her,
Rodrigo Garcia, 2000