Gender Roles in Film:Sexual Objectification of Women
Laura Mulvey published an article that explores visual pleasure in film using a psychoanalytic background. The pleasure and unpleasure provided by conventional narrative film depicts a woman as passive raw material for the active stare of man (Mulvey, p.67). As a result, the woman is an image of castration that induces fetishistic or voyeuristic mechanisms to evade her threat. Narrative film portrays the woman in voyeuristic form by highlighting her to-be-looked-at-ness. Narrative film employs cinematic codes that create a world, a stare, and an object which generates an illusion of the measure of desire. Carol J. Clover explores the role of gender in the Slasher Film in which the killer’s “victim is a beautiful, sexually attractive woman” (Clover, p.192). The Slasher Film is an example of sexualization of both movie and action as the role of men and women is portrayed differently. Carol Clover’s case study does not suit the topic of sexual objectification of women in film but Laura Mulvey’s case study is very suitable.
Analysis of the Two Case Studies
Laura Mulvey’s case study delves into the issue of the politics of identity by exploring how different genders are depicted in narrative film. The text employs a psychoanalytic background to explore this issue and demonstrates how fascination is reinforced by pre-existing patterns working in the individual subject and social formations that affect an individual. Narrative film reveals, reflects, and portrays the interpretation of sexual difference based on pre-existing social formations. These social formations shape how men and women are depicted in films, which primarily act as a reflection of society. Since the unconscious of patriarchal society has shaped the structure and form of film, eroticism plays a major role in how women are depicted. The patriarchal society has contributed to the use of images and erotic ways of looking and spectacle in film. Mulvey further contends that the patriarchal unconscious has had a two-fold impact on the function of the woman. First, the woman “symbolizes the castration threat by her real absence of a penis” (Mulvey, p.57). Secondly, she raises a child into the symbolic as she is viewed as a carrier of the bleeding wound. Therefore, narrative film reinforces the idea that a woman can only exist in light of castration and cannot surpass it.
Carol Clover’s case study explores the role of gender in the slasher film based on Hitchcock’s Psycho, which is the immediate ancestor of the film. The elements of the film are familiar as the killer is a psychotic product from a sick family who can still be recognized as a human. On the other hand, the victim of the psychotic killer is a beautiful, sexually attractive woman. While none of the features employed in the film is original, it depicts the sexualization of movie and action characterized by numerous imitations and variations. The idea of a psychotic killer is portrayed in other films like Texas Chain and Halloween. This implies that the idea of a killer targeting beautiful women is a reflection of the patriarchal unconscious that dominates society. Therefore, men are portrayed as superior in the slasher film, which reinforces the patriarchal unconscious...
Works Cited
Clover, Carol J. “Her Body, Himself: Gender in the Slasher Film.” University of California Press, University of California Press, 10 Feb. 2017, http://www.users.clas.ufl.edu/burt/paranoid70scinema/HerBodyHimself.pdf.
Cowan, Gloria, and Margaret O'brien. “Gender and Survival vs. Death in Slasher Films: A Content Analysis.” Sex Roles, vol. 23, no. 3-4, 1990, pp. 187–196., doi:10.1007/bf00289865.
Loreck Teaching Associate in the School of Media, Janice. “Explainer: What Does the 'Male Gaze' Mean, and What about a Female Gaze?” The Conversation, The Conversation Inc., 22 Apr. 2020, http://www.theconversation.com/explainer-what-does-the-male-gaze-mean-and-what-about-a-female-gaze-52486.
Marian. “A Very Short Summary of Psychoanalytic Feminist Theory and Practice.” Oakton Community College, Oakton Community College, 15 Feb. 2012, http://www.oakton.edu/user/2/hgraff/WGSSummaryPsychoanalyticFemminismS12.html.
Mulvey, Laura. “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema.” Arizona State University, Arizona State University, Oct. 1975, http://www.asu.edu/courses/fms504/total-readings/mulvey-visualpleasure.pdf.
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