Thursday 4 October 2007

Laura Mulvey


Research on Laura Mulvey:

British feminist film theorist.
Mulvey's contribution was to inaugurate the intersection of film theory, psychoanalysis, and feminism.
She instead stated that she intended to make a "political use" of Freud and Lacan, and then used some of their concepts to argue that the cinematic apparatus of classical Hollywood cinema inevitably put the spectator in a masculine subject position, with the figure of the woman on screen as the object of desire.
Hollywood female characters of the 1950s and 60s were, according to Mulvey, coded with "to-be-looked-at-ness." Mulvey suggests that there were two distinct modes of the male gaze of this era: "voyeuristic" (i.e. seeing women as 'whores') and "fetishistic" (i.e. seeing women as 'madonnas').
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Mulvey


Mulvey distinguishes between two modes of looking for the film spectator: voyeuristic and fetishistic, which she presents in Freudian terms as responses to male ‘castration anxiety’. Voyeuristic looking involves a controlling gaze and Mulvey argues that this has has associations with sadism: ‘pleasure lies in ascertaining guilt - asserting control and subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness’ (Mulvey 1992, 29). Fetishistic looking, in contrast, involves ‘the substitution of a fetish object or turning the represented figure itself into a fetish so that it becomes reassuring rather than dangerous.
http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/gaze/gaze09.html


1 comment:

Miss Jones said...

So Mulvey "inaugurated the intersection of film theory, psychoanalysis and feminism", did she, Kiran? Stop it with the cutting and pasting! You don't learn anything that way - hence the lack of thesis! Get your media dictionary words on your blog and start doing some independent thinking on your independent study, please.