Hitchcock & Feminist Film Theory. Laura Mulvey Mulvey is best known for her essay, "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema", written in 1973. Mulvey’s article.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Media Studies SoSe 2011 Mag. Klaus Heissenberger North American Literary and Cultural Studies Universität des Saarlandes.
Advertisements

Popular Film and Emotional Response Spectatorship Topics Revision.
The power of the close-up
Feminism in the media Tania Modleski (American feminist):  Two predominant types of female representation within the media  The ‘ideal’ – woman, wife,
 simultaneously zooming in and tracking backward  the foreground remains stable while the background expands backwards  gives us a sense of distortion.
Vertigo How many different ways can we look at Hitchcock?
Thesis  Over time, the line between femininity and masculinity has begun to shift and blur, leaving room for a dominant female image to emerge. In magazines.
Key Media theory A2 MEST 3 revision.
Difference, Identity and Representation: Communication and Spectatorship Anneka Smelik "Feminist Film Theory” Laura Mulvey, “Visual Pleasure and Narrative.
Formulating a Thesis Thesis = the ultimate goal of the focusing process Main point Theme Position Central idea Perspective Hypothesis Argument Claim Conclusion.
Visual Pleasure and the Narrative Cinema Article by: Laura Mulvey Presentation by: Evelyn Walker.
Announcements Luna Fest - March 4th - 6pm-9pm in the Price Center Ballrooms. Lunafest is a film festival fundraiser for, by, and about women. 7 short.
Between Gazes Camelia Elias. aims and focus  look at:  how gender is a performative and constitutive act within cultural frameworks  issues of representation,
Gaze, Gender and Genre Looking at Danzón.
Between Gazes Camelia Elias. 1. wave feminism  V. Woolf: “A Room of One’s Own”  socio-historical condition  Simone de Beauvoir: The Second Sex  sex/gender.
Week 2, Jan 13 th : Masculinity /Femininity: The Tough Guy and the Fatal Woman “Noir as a genre of forbidden desires” Noel Carroll.
Film Program Coming Up Korea, North and South: A Cinematic Perspective January in Atkinson Hall, CALIT2 Info on the program at
Introduction to Media Studies SoSe 2011 Mag. Klaus Heissenberger North American Literary and Cultural Studies Universität des Saarlandes.
Between Gazes Camelia Elias. aims and focus  look at:  how gender is a performative and constitutive act within cultural frameworks  issues of representation,
VISUAL CULTURE.
Feminism and film theory To understand and critique gender hierarchies and patriarchal ideologies in commercial narrative cinema. To define the terms of.
COLOUR in Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958) LOCORU.
Film scholars have argued that Vertigo is a film about cinema and about spectatorship. How far do you think this is true?
What’s wrong with images of women in the cinema? l Greater differentiation of men’s roles than women’s roles. l Men portrayed as actors within history;
AO1: Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of media concepts, contexts and critical debates. AO2: Apply knowledge and understanding when analysing media.
Announcements Reading added for next week, linked to online syllabus. You will need to enter: log in: 21student password: cogn21.
THE MALE GAZE.  Definition: When a viewer imposes their unwanted or objectifying gaze upon an image  The Male Gaze is an unequal power relationship.
Feminist Theory Music Videos 20/9/13. Feminist Theory The Male Gaze The function of women in particular genres Feminist criticism in general.
Feminism and film theory 1972: the first two women's film festivals organized in New York and Edinburgh; – W omen and Film begins publishing in California.
Critical Literacy New York City 5 p.m., Sept. 11th, 2001.
Representation REPRESENTATION What is it? Think back to your AS exam, Section A… Remember our friend Dyer…
Explore some of the ways in which you have gained fresh insights into your chosen film as a result of applying one or more specific critical approaches.
Close Study Film: Vertigo LO: Understand the context of the film ‘Vertigo’ by Alfred Hitchcock and how we will be analysing it within our exam. By the.
EMOTIONAL RESPONSE Section B – Spectatorship Topics
John “Scottie” Ferguson Madeline Elster Judy Barton Gavin Elster Midge
Love, Danger, and the Professional Ideology of Hollywood Cinema Article by Mark Garrett Cooper Presentation by Daniel Voellinger.
蘇筱雯. John Berger From Ways of Seeing  The absence of the male figure invites the audiences to “assume the position of the authoritative viewing.
The Gaze. The Optical Mirage-like, avoids depiction of three dimensions/hard outlines Does not acknowledge its status as a painted object Unites subjectivity.
PSYCHOANALYSIS & GENDER By: CARMEN ESSA Edited By: Dr. Picart Associate Professor of English Courtesy Associate Professor of Law.
Rethinking the Gaze: Problems of apparatus, class, gender, sexuality and race By:Jason Grant McKahan Presentation by:Brian Ambrose.
H OW DOES YOUR MEDIA PRODUCT REPRESENT PARTICULAR SOCIAL GROUPS ?
Feminism & The Male Gaze
MEP 203 CONTEMPORARY MEDIA THEORY
Learning Objectives: - Develop understanding of key scenes later in the film - Develop an opinion about the concept of the story as a re-telling of Greek.
Learning Objectives: - Develop understanding of key scenes later in the film - Develop an opinion about the concept of the story as a re-telling of Greek.
About… Laura Mulvey was born on the 15 th August 1941 and is known today as a British feminist film theorist. Mulvey was educated at St Hilda’s College,
Critical Approaches to Film Film & Feminism.
Dreamworlds 3 (2007) –maybe at end *Part 1 *Part 2 Constructing Femininity.
Feminism Key Film Theories (Taken from Cinema Studies: the Key Concepts (2 nd Ed.) by Susan Hayward.
What is Cinema? Feminism. Rear Window (Hitchcock, 1954)
Key Concept: Representation By Ilan Rubens and Layla Keegan.
Psychoanalytic approaches Week 9. Lecture outline i What’s involved in looking? ii Unconscious structures: Freud’s Oedipal Complex iii Unconscious structures:
Representation and the Male Gaze. WALT  Learning about Laura Mulvey’s “Male Gaze” and how it applies to how women are represented in music videos.
The historical nature of the essay Film as it is related to cultural practice: its constitutive role The analysis of the film within patriarchal system.
Section A: Representation Lesson 2 What are the signifiers here? What do they signify?
Main works: The Interpretation of Dreams (1899) Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (1905) Totem and Taboo (1913) Civilisation and its Discontents.
The male gaze Laura Mulvey’s Theory 1975.
Violence in Cinema Session 7 Fight Club.
Vertigo and Psychoanalysis
Escapism What is escapism?
Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema (1975)
What is Cinema? Critical Approaches Psychoanalysis and Feminism I
EMILY PHOEBE LYNSEY CHARLOTTE VIEWING GENDER IN FILM.
SEXUAL OBJECTIFICATION OF WOMEN MS1 Representation of an Issue
What is Cinema? Critical Approaches Psychoanalysis and Feminism I
Section A: Question 1 B: Theoretical Evaluation of Production
FM4: Varieties Of Film Experience – Issues and Debates
Spectatorship and Beasts of the Southern Wild
Presentation transcript:

Hitchcock & Feminist Film Theory

Laura Mulvey Mulvey is best known for her essay, "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema", written in Mulvey’s article argues mainly that the cinematic method of classical Hollywood inevitably puts the spectator in a masculine subject position, with the figure of the woman on screen as the object of desire.

In classical Hollywood cinema, viewers are encouraged to identify with the protagonist of the film, who tends to be a man. Meanwhile, female characters are, according to Mulvey, coded with "to-be-looked-at-ness."

The essential idea: Male/active: Female/passive. The male ‘looks’ (active), The female ‘is looked at’ (passive)

“Hitchcock… takes fascination with an image through scopophilic eroticism as the subject of the film.” “In Vertigo in particular, but also in Marnie and Rear Window, the look is central to the plot, oscillating between voyeurism and fetishistic fascination.”

“Hitchcock's skilful use of identification processes and liberal use of subjective camera from the point of view of the male protagonist draw the spectators deeply into his position, making them share his uneasy gaze.” “The audience is absorbed into a voyeuristic situation… which parodies his own in the cinema.”

“In Vertigo, subjective camera predominates. Apart from flash-back from Judy's point of view, the narrative is woven around what Scottie sees or fails to see. The audience follows the growth of his erotic obsession and subsequent despair precisely from his point of view.”

Problems with Mulvey’s theory “Apart from flash-back from Judy's point of view” – does this undermine the ‘fiction’ of Scottie’s obsession? Critics of the article objected to the fact that her argument implied the impossibility of genuine 'feminine' enjoyment of the classical Hollywood cinema. her argument did not seem to take into account spectatorships that were not organised along the normative lines of gender.

Tania Modleski: ‘The Women who knew too much’ ‘I will demonstrate how men’s fascination and identification with the feminine continually undermines their effort to achieve a masculine strength and autonomy and is a primary cause of a violence towards women that abounds in Hitchcock’s films.’

The image of femininity in the film is shown as a male construct.

BUT: If the feminine, against which the masculine defines himself, is nothing, what, if anything, is he?

Therefore, Vertigo is about the illusion/construction of masculine identity as much as it is about the construction of feminine appearance. The film addresses the nature of looking, manipulation and illusion – something fundamental to cinema and spectatorship.

The ‘demasculinising’ scenes with Midge

Elster is portrayed in ways that foreground his masculinity

Key examples to discuss Scottie follows Madeleine (‘follows’ in what sense?)

How cinematography highlights the concept of identity, the constructed image, voyeurism, etc

Recurring shots, themes, locations, narrative developments, etc

Scottie is traumatised by his inability to dominate/possess his ideal woman

The dream blurs identity boundaries

Reconstructing Madeleine – Scottie is attempting to assert male dominance over the female

Scottie’s rage is at his realisation his new-found masculinity has proved to be an illusion turns to a state of impotence

Vertigo is about the illusion/construction of masculine identity as much as it is about the construction of feminine appearance - discuss Present examples you could use to argue for or against the statement