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Showing posts from October, 2022

The Death of the Artist

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     In “The Death of the Author”, Roland Barthes discusses the relationship between the author, their writing, and the readers - which Sherrie Levine later borrows from to apply to her art. Barthes starts by describing the idea that, contrary to what we often think and feel, the author’s words are as separate from the author as an actor is to the character they are portraying on stage. As humans, when we discover a piece of literature that piques our interest, it’s our tendency to want to research the author to better understand the person who wrote those words. Sometimes, we may even put these writers up on pedestals in our minds for having some sort of “secret” and glorify them for it.      But Barthes argues that, no matter how an author arranges the words together on the page, all of the words have already existed and there’s no combination of words the author can arrange that would be truly original to them as an individual. By looking to the author ...

Intersectionality and the Oppositional Gaze

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This week, to further the conversation about sexism in cinema, we read The Oppositional Gaze by bell hooks, who introduces and reinforces the importance of intersectionality when talking about inclusivity in film. Hooks, a black woman, breaks down the differences between white and black female representation in film, how feminism is leaving black women out, and how she draws her own power from that which has been historically used against women like her. The mainstream cinema psychology that Laura Mulvey described in last week’s reading is only effective when the viewer can identify with the characters they are watching. When discussing it in terms of men and women alone, men identify with the male protagonist and women identify with the female love interest - but these tropes, until recently, were exclusive to white characters and actors. Even in the sexism of that structure, both white male and female characters were idealized. While we may understand now how oppressive the objectifi...

The Male Gaze in Cinema

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For week 5 we read “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” by Laura Mulvey, who discussed the effect watching films in theaters has on the viewers, and some of the contradictory psychology behind it. She first explained the concept of scopophilia, or sexual pleasure from looking - similar to voyeurism, if not a milder and more persistent version. When watching films in a theater, despite it being a public experience intended for mass audiences, the viewer is made to feel as though they are witnessing private moments in a private space. The perspectives from which movies are shot, the intimacy of the scenes, and the darkness in the theater are all giving them a sense of privacy even when watching with 100 other people. This facet would of course be magnified as cinema has become more and more accessible to consume in the comfort of our homes in total privacy, as well. Mulvey explained that because of this scopophilia, we are drawn to films that satisfy a base sexual desire to look. The s...