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| Marilyn Munroe |
Today we revised theoretical frameworks that you may draw on as you research music videos and write about your own. In the A2 exam, you will need to do this for both sections of the exam paper. For example, you will need to analyse your own production work with critical distance.
Daniel Chandler writes about film spectatorship and Laura Mulvey's gaze theory:
Daniel Chandler writes about film spectatorship and Laura Mulvey's gaze theory:
- 'Film
has been called an instrument of the male gaze, producing
representations of women, the good life, and sexual fantasy from a male
point of view' (Schroeder 1998, 208). The concept derives from a seminal
article called Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema by Laura
Mulvey, a feminist film theorist. It was published in 1975 and is one of
the most widely cited and anthologized (though certainly not one of the
most accessible) articles in the whole of contemporary film theory.
Laura Mulvey did not undertake empirical studies of actual filmgoers,
but declared her intention to make ‘political use’ of Freudian
psychoanalytic theory (in a version influenced by Jacques Lacan) in a
study of cinematic spectatorship.
- Such psychoanalytically-inspired studies of 'spectatorship' focus on how 'subject positions'
are constructed by media texts rather than investigating the viewing
practices of individuals in specific social contexts. Mulvey notes that
Freud had referred to (infantile) scopophilia - the pleasure involved in looking at other people’s bodies as (particularly, erotic) objects.
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| Rita Hayworth |
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| Halle Berry |
Both
Steve Neale and Richard Dyer (1982) challenge the idea that the male
is never sexually objectified in mainstream cinema and argued that the
male is not always the looker in control of the gaze. Since the 1980s
there has been an increasing display and sexualisation of the male body
in mainstream cinema, television and advertising (Moore 1987, Evans
& Gamman 1995, Mort 1996, Edwards 1997). Gender is not the only
important factor in determining what Jane Gaines calls 'looking
relations' - race andclass are also key factors (Lutz
& Collins 1994, 365; Gaines 1988; de Lauretis 1987; Tagg 1988;
Traube 1992). Ethnicity was found to be a key factor in differentiating
amongst different groups of women viewers in a study of Women Viewing Violence (Schlesinger et al. 1992). Michel Foucault, who linked knowledge with power, related the 'inspecting gaze' to power rather than to gender in his discussion of surveillance(Foucault 1977).
We also looked at Miley Cyrus Wrecking Ball (2013) as a very recent example.



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