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Title: Lecture 5: Classic White Women


1
Lecture 5Classic White Women
Blonde Venus (1932) Directed by Josef Von
Sternberg
  • Professor Michael Green

2
Previous Lecture
  • The Good Neighbor Policy and Hollywood Censorship
  • Hollywoods Imagined Latin America
  • Dolores del Rio and Racialized Sexuality
  • Writing about Film Lesson 3

3
This Lecture
  • Feminist Film Theories
  • Is the Gaze Male?
  • Race and the Female Star in the 1930s
  • Writing about Film The Thesis

4
Feminist Film Theories
Gone with the Wind (1939) Directed by Victor
Fleming
  • Lecture 5 Part I

5
Feminist Film Criticism
  • Feminist film criticism, rather than responding
    to established theories, emerged from the daily
    ongoing concerns of women re-evaluating the
    culture in which they had been socialized and
    educated.
  • In other words, feminist film criticism did not
    evolve on a purely intellectual level, but grew
    out of the female desire for social and cultural
    change.

5
6
A Sociological Approach
  • Feminist criticism began by taking a sociological
    approach, in which critics assessed texts
    according to how well roles for women represented
    them as autonomous and independent.

Stella Dallas (1937) Directed by King Vidor
7
Analyzing Signs
  • Feminist theorists moved from a sociological
    approach to analyzing film form using semiotics,
    or the study of signs.
  • Signs are made up of signifiers the form which
    the sign takes and signified the concepts
    they represent.
  • Semiotics studies how meaning is constructed,
    interpreted and understood through signs we
    create, including cinematic words and images.

8
Psychoanalysis
  • The next wave of feminist criticism, influenced
    by psychoanalysis, studied how meaning is
    produced in films, rather than just analyzing the
    content.
  • These critics argued that Oedipal processes were
    central to how cinematic texts are produced.

9
Definition Psychoanalysis
  • A theory of the psychology of human behavior, a
    method of research and a system of psychotherapy,
    originally developed by Sigmund Freud, which
    concentrates on how the unconscious affects human
    motivation.

Sigmund Freud
9
10
Definition Oedipus Complex
  • In Oedipus Rex, the Aeschylus play, Oedipus
    unknowingly kills his father and sleeps with his
    mother. Freud believes that this dramatizes a
    primal human desire because the process of a
    childs socialization revolves around the
    development of an unconscious libidinal
    attachment to the mother, alongside a jealous
    rivalry with the father.
  • Aidan Arrowsmith, Critical concepts

10
11
Psychoanalytical Theory
  • Psychoanalytical theory has had a huge impact
    upon literary and film studies as a mode of
    interpretation, a theory about the formation of
    the subject (a theory of identity and language),
    an apparatus through which to understand the
    workings of ideology in society and culture.
  • Important theorists include Jacques Lacan and
    Laura Mulvey.

11
12
Theory of the Gaze
  • The gaze is a technical term which was
    originally used in film theory in the 1970s but
    which is now more broadly used by media theorists
    to refer both to the ways in which viewers look
    at images of people in any visual medium and to
    the gaze of those depicted in visual texts. The
    term 'the male gaze' has become something of a
    feminist cliché for referring to the voyeuristic
    way in which men look at women.
  • Daniel Chandler, Notes on the Gaze

12
13
Origin of The Gaze
  • The concept of The Gaze derives from an article
    called Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema
    (1975) by Laura Mulvey, a feminist film theorist.
  • It is one of the most widely cited and
    anthologized articles in film theory.

13
14
Visual Pleasure in the Narrative Cinema
  • Feminist critic Laura Mulveys theory revolves
    around the pleasure involved in looking at other
    peoples bodies as (particularly, erotic)
    objects. In the darkness of the cinema auditorium
    we may look without being seen either by those on
    screen or by other members of the audience.

15
Visual Pleasure (continued)
  • Drawing on psychoanalytical theory, Mulvey argues
    that cinema facilitates for the viewer both the
    voyeuristic process of objectification of female
    characters and also the narcissistic process of
    identification with an ideal ego seen on the
    screen.
  • She declares that in patriarchal society
    pleasure in looking has been split between
    active/male and passive/female.

16
A Few More Points
  • The gaze implies a psychological relationship of
    power, in which the gazer is superior to the
    object of the gaze.
  • Mulvey argues that in order to 'suspend one's
    disbelief' and to become drawn into a
    conventional narrative when watching a film one
    must accept the viewpoint of the camera as though
    it were ones own.

17
Is the Gaze Male?
Im no Angel (1933) Directed by Wesley Ruggles
  • Lecture 5 Part II

18
Using the Theory
  • In Is the Gaze Male? E. Ann Kaplan using
    psychoanalysis, traditionally a male domain, and
    Mulveys Gaze theory to make arguments about
    women in film.
  • She uses the theories to understand the way in
    which women have been socialized in patriarchy.
  • She sees this as a jumping off point for changing
    the way women are represented in film and
    changing their lives in society.

19
Patriarchal Ideology
  • Psychoanalysis is a crucial tool for
    explaining the needs, desires and male-female
    positioning that are reflected in film. The
    signs in the Hollywood film convey the
    patriarchal ideology that underlies our social
    structures and that constructs women in very
    specific ways - ways that reflect patriarchal
    needs, the patriarchal unconscious.
  • E. Ann Kaplan, Is the Gaze Male?

19
20
The Function of Melodrama
  • One of the ways in which women have been
    socialized into patriarchy is their
    representation in film.
  • Kaplan argues that melodrama functions to expose
    the constraints and limitations that the family
    places on women and at the same time gets women
    to accept those constraints as normal and
    inevitable.

20
21
Genre Exclusion
  • Historically, melodrama tends to be the only
    genre in which women are central.
  • Women are generally excluded from the central
    roles in Hollywood genres.
  • Oedipal issues drive melodrama which features
    such themes as Illicit love relationships,
    mother/child relationships and husband/wife
    relationships.
  • Pause the lecture and watch the clip from Stella
    Dallas.

21
22
Gender Roles in Society
  • Our culture is deeply committed to myths of
    demarcated sex differences, called masculine
    and feminine, which revolve first on a complex
    gaze apparatus and second on dominance-submission
    patterns. This positioning of the two sex
    genders in representation clearly privileges the
    male however, women have recently been permitted
    to step into the masculine role as long as the
    man steps into her position.
  • E. Ann Kaplan, Is the Gaze Male?

22
23
Role Reversal
Tomb Raider (2001) Directed by Simon West
23
24
Conclusion
  • Ultimately Kaplan uses psychoanalytic theory to
    argue how
  • women take pleasure from the objectification of
    the gaze
  • how they have been positioned as silent, absent
    and marginal.
  • She concludes that it is this very exclusion from
    male culture and language that has left them room
    to affect change both in representation and
    society.

24
25
Race and the Female Star of the 1930s
Blonde Venus (1932) Directed by Josef von
Sternberg
  • Lecture 5 Part III

26
Subversive Feminism
  • James Snead argues that 1930s female stars such
    as Shirley Temple and Mae West pursued an agenda
    within their films of outwitting the
    male-dominated world, thereby trying to somewhat
    equalize the gender power balance at least in
    terms of cinematic representation.
  • He argues that they accomplish this within the
    preferred patriarchal roles of women as both
    child-like and sexual beings.

26
27
Sex and Race
  • Snead argues that Mae West achieves much of her
    sex-goddess stature her mythification with
    the complicity, and even encouragement, of black
    women.
  • He claims that the filmmakers represent black
    women as swarthy and elemental, then compare them
    with Wests white and ethereal beauty in order to
    elevate it.
  • Scenes of black maids dressing white women often
    served to set up this contrast.

27
28
Black Maids/White Women
  • The scenes of the maids adorning West with
    various articles of clothing . . . are classical
  • instances of the black maids dressing or
    grooming white woman sequences, which reach
    their pinnacle six years later in the famous
    dressing scene between Vivien Leigh and Hattie
    McDaniel in Gone with the Wind.
  • James Snead, Angel, Venus, Jezebel Race and
    the Female Star in Three Thirties Films
  • Pause the lecture and watch the clip from Gone
    with the Wind.

28
29
A Degree of Racial Solidarity
  • Snead points out that though blacks do not
    ultimately share in the benefits of the
    mythification, they still share a sense of female
    solidarity that crosses racial lines.
  • He says that Wests films are about consolidating
    womens power in spite of a limited social
    context,
  • These films dont seen women black or white
    as inferior to men, and are thus revolutionary.

29
30
Blonde Venus
  • In Blonde Venus, Marlene Dietrichs character
    represents a normal white housewife and mother,
    who is accidentally propelled by purest accident
    into a life of extreme degradation and extreme
    elevation.
  • Her journey will both subvert and confirm
    established 1930s codes of properly
    representing race and gender.

30
31
Beauty and Whiteness
  • Snead argues that films visual style represents
    Dietrich as a blonde goddess who who is able to
    transcend the concerns of ordinary men and women.
  • He says that even the title emphasizes the
    connection between beauty (Venus) and whiteness
    (blonde).

31
32
Overcoming Darkness
  • Even though Helen enters realms of metaphorical
    and actual darkness, her blonde beauty becomes
    the sign of internal heroism that allows her to
    overcome darkness.

32
33
Unifying Racial and Sexual Opposites
  • Yet this heroism, as we shall see, comes from
    her ability to integrate into her female
    blondness the categories of blackness and
    maleness. She becomes an Odyssean hero whose
    range of experience extends to the widest
    possible extremes in this case, the heroine can
    even unify domains of racial and sexual
    opposites.
  • James Snead, Angel, Venus, Jezebel Race and
    the Female Star in Three Thirties Films

33
34
Hot Voodoo Number
  • One extreme is dramatized in the Hot Voodoo
    number.
  • Helen reveals her feminine whiteness from within
    a gorillas suit.
  • She breaks taboos and threatens patriarchy and
    whiteness by absorbing blackness.
  • Snead argues that this figure of the Africanized
    Blonde becomes the main symbol for the fallen
    Helen.
  • Pause the lecture and watch clip 1 from Blonde
    Venus.

34
35
Blonde Venus and Black Maids
  • Dietrichs character in the movie also follows
    the 1930s trend of the white woman having black
    maids.
  • The maids are desexualized and provide symbolic
    contrast to the white woman.
  • One maid is played by Hattie McDaniel, who Snead
    says often played dual movie roles as aesthetic
    foil and maternal surrogate for the mythified
    white woman.
  • Pause the lecture and watch clip 2 from Blonde
    Venus.

35
36
Disguised Inequalities
  • As in Im No Angel, the black and the white women
    work together to undermine the structure of male
    laws and punishments.
  • Their solidarity, however, disguises the real
    inequalities between the women and the black
    sidekicks disappear once Helen completes her
    symbolic journey through blackness and
    squalor, and arrives on top again at the Paris
    club.

36
37
Usurping Masculinity
  • In the Paris club the Blonde Venus has now
    usurped, not merely black vigor, but male
    privilege. Here, mythification elevates Dietrich
    over white men as well as black women, while
    borrowing crucial characteristics of each. Her
    masculinized appearance stands out from a
    background consisting solely of elegantly
    feminine dancers.
  • James Snead, Angel, Venus, Jezebel Race and
    the Female Star in Three Thirties Films

37
38
Blonde Venus as Goddess
  • Dietrich has, in fact, come full circle. In the
    course of becoming well-rounded, she has
    assimilated and overcome the realms of white
    motherhood, black womanhood, black manhood (by
    adopting the tall, dark, primitive trappings of
    the gorilla), and white manhood. Truly only a
    goddess could exhibit such ubiquity and potency
    with such apparent ease.
  • James Snead, Angel, Venus, Jezebel Race and
    the Female Star in Three Thirties Films

38
39
Conflicting Ideological Agenda
  • Despite her subversive adventures, Helen goes
    home in the end, re-establishing the convention
    of the nuclear family and the normal role of
    the white woman.
  • The social misbehavior and usurping of blackness
    and masculinity is put into the context of an
    undesirable nightmare.
  • The Blonde Venus disappears as do the threats to
    whiteness and patriarchy.
  • Pause the lecture and watch clip 3 from Blonde
    Venus.

39
40
Writing About Film The Thesis
Pandoras Box (1929) Directed by G.W. Pabst
Lecture 5 Part IV
41
Summary of Interpretive Writing
  • An interpretive claim presents an argument about
    a films meaning and significance.
  • These kind of claims address a films themes and
    abstract ideas, its social relevance, its
    historical context, and its influence, among
    other topics.
  • But they do more than identify themes they go
    further, making an argument about what a film
    does with those themes.

42
The Thesis Statement
  • A thesis statement is the central claim of your
    paper - an assertion or argument that you try to
    prove through evidence. You must support the
    thesis statement in every paragraph and section
    of your paper.

43
Developing a Thesis
  • In developing a thesis, start by asking yourself
    questions, such as
  • How is the film intriguing or disturbing?
  • What makes the film noteworthy?
  • Does the film use filmmaking techniques in an
    original or pronounced way?
  • How is the film situated historically?
  • What is the films affect on specific audiences?
  • Such questions will help you come up with your
    thesis.

43
44
Purpose of Your Thesis
  • Though the thesis is technically your opinion, it
    is not evaluative the way a film review is.
  • In a critical essay, your thesis is designed to
    help others understand
  • how the film functions
  • how meaning is constructed and perpetuated
  • How the film produces social and cultural effects
  • The films relationship to the film industry
  • How the film is historical

44
45
Thesis Example 1
  • In this paper, I argue that Blonde Venus (1932)
    presents a traditional representation of gender
    roles, using narrative and visual elements to
    perpetuate an ideology of patriarchy and
    naturalize the idea of women as dependent mothers
    and homemakers.

46
Thesis Example 2
  • Despite the fact that Blonde Venus represents
    traditional gender stereotypes, the movie is both
    progressive and subversive in representing women.
    In this paper, I will argue that Blonde Venus,
    through narrative and visual style, challenges
    patriarchy by criticizing the traditional social
    roles of women as mothers and homemakers.

46
47
Supporting your Thesis
  • Once you have your thesis laid out, you need to
    start thinking about how you are going to support
    it using evidence - both from the movie or movies
    you are analyzing and from outside sources.
  • You can sum up the structure of an argumentative
    essay with the acronym TREE Thesis supported by
    Reasons, which rest upon Evidence and Examples.

48
End of Lecture 5
  • Next Lecture Ethnic Assimilation Hollywood-Style
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