Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySuzan Nelson Modified over 8 years ago
1
Psychoanalytic approaches Week 9
2
Lecture outline i What’s involved in looking? ii Unconscious structures: Freud’s Oedipal Complex iii Unconscious structures: Lacan’s Mirror stage iv Scopophilia, voyeurism, fetishism v Visual pleasure and narrative cinema
3
i What’s involved in looking? Laura Mulvey (1941-) Filmmaker and film theorist
4
Mulvey’s article is polemical, a call to arms: ‘Psychoanalytic theory is thus appropriated here as a political weapon, demonstrating the way the unconscious of patriarchal society has structured film form’. (Mulvey, p.1)
5
The article ends in this way: ‘Women, whose image has continually been stolen and used for this end, cannot view the decline of the traditional film form with anything much more than sentimental regret’.
6
ii Freud’s Oedipal Complex
7
The Electra Complex (girls) -Female child initially attached to mother -Realization of mother’s lack (of penis) -Transfers her desire from mother to father (rival to her mother) -Represses desire, accepts her place -Identifies with her mother
9
The Electra Complex in Hitchcock: Marnie (1964)
10
Marnie (1964) Marnie steals from her employers (male) She appears to be a pathological liar Early trauma is revealed: -her mother was a prostitute -Marnie witnessed her being attacked by a client and killed him -Marnie’s transgression (killing of a father- figure) is rehabilitated by her love of a man
11
The Oedipal Complex (boys) -Male child initially attached to mother and is a rival to his father -Realization of mother’s lack (of penis) -Castration anxiety (trauma - fears he will lose his penis) -Identifies with his father (realizes he will inherit the power his father has) -Represses desire, accepts his place
12
The Oedipal Complex in Hitchcock: Psycho (1960)
13
Psycho(1960) -Norman Bates has failed to separate from his mother and accede to the world of the father -The Motel is a world within a world -Bates cannot desire women without being punished by his rivalrous mother
14
iii Jacques Lacan (1901 – 1981)
15
-Lacan was influenced by structuralism -The unconscious is structured like language (it is not outside of language) -Language is not neutral but value- laden -We come to know ourselves through language
16
The Mirror Stage (developmental stage of differentiation) -The mirror stage describes a split that takes place between what the child ‘feels’ and how s/he appears as an image (age 12-18 months) -The mirror image reflects a more coherent, unified ‘self’ (an image ideal)
17
- a fundamental recognition of the self as ‘ideal’ - cinema reproduces this pleasure of the fantasy of an ideal self
18
Lacan also offers a tripartite system akin to Freud’s id, ego and superego: imaginary, symbolic, real
19
imaginary: maternal space, visual symbolic: culture, language, law of father real: that which cannot find recognition in the symbolic
20
iv Scopophilia, voyeurism, fetishism Mulvey draws on a mix of Freudian and Lacanian theory. In particular, she deploys these 3 psychoanalytic terms to describe the gendered nature of looking within the cinema.
21
Scopophilia – the pleasure of looking at another person as an erotic object. -Objectifying -Investigative
22
Voyeurism – the pleasure of looking without being seen. -Power of invisibility -Obsessive quest
23
Fetishism – obsessive focus on a substitute object -Psychically displaces threat by an object of desire -Alleviates anxiety
24
‘While curiosity is a compulsive desire to investigate something secret, fetishism is born out of a refusal to see, a refusal to accept the difference the female body represents for the male.’ (Mulvey, continued…)
25
In Mulvey’s reading, the fetish takes on greater significance than that of an object within a scene: -Woman as fetish
26
In Mulvey’s reading, the fetish takes on greater significance than that of an object within a scene: -Woman as fetish -The male gaze as fetishistic (both of these divert attention away from the anxiety of what a woman might be / want / do with an obsessive focus elsewhere)
27
v Visual pleasure and narrative cinema
28
Mulvey’s theory of cinematic looking: - the apparatus of cinema has developed through a patriarchal symbolic order - the ‘drive’ of cinema is to satisfy the unconscious wishes and alleviate anxieties
29
How does the apparatus work to this effect? - the focal point of the narrative is a woman - the naturalization of shot types focuses on the woman as object - the framing of woman is contained by a relay of looks: the male protagonist directs the spectator’s look towards the woman t
31
How does the narrative work to this effect? - woman as site of investigation - man as active investigating subject - man moves narrative forward (action) - woman as spectacle arrests narrative Vertigo – Scottie is a voyeur, he obsessively pursues a woman, or an image of a woman (perfection). He has the law on his side. But, ‘erotic involvement with the look is disorienting…’ (Mulvey).
32
‘ These complex series of turnings away, of covering over, not of the eyes but of understanding, of fixating on a substitute object to hold the gaze, leave the female body as an enigma and threat, condemned to return as a symbol of anxiety whilst simultaneously being transformed into its own screen in representation. ’ (Mulvey, Fetishism and Curiosity, 1995)
33
‘Hitchcock has never concealed his interest in voyeurism, cinematic and non-cinematic’. (Mulvey, VP+NC)
34
Limitations of Mulvey’s theory: Can it be applied beyond Hollywood films of mid- twentieth century or is it limited to these? What about gay looks and cross-gender desires? What about race and objectification?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.