Transcript Mulvey.ppt

VISUAL PLEASURE AND
NARRATIVE CINEMA
Laura Mulvey
• Screen Autumn 1975
• Intention:
Analyze-Destroy
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three looks associated with cinema:
the camera as it records the pro-filmic event
the audience as it watches the final product
the characters at each other within the screen illusion
The conventions of narrative film deny the first two
and subordinate them to the third, the conscious
aim being always to eliminate intrusive camera
presence and prevent a distancing awareness in
the audience.
Without these two absences (the material
existence of the recording process, the critical
reading of the spectator), fictional drama
cannot achieve reality, obviousness and truth.
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The Quote of Psychoanalysis:
Freud & J. Lacan
• Freud: ① the anxiety of castration
② Oedipus complex
③ Psychological complement
• J. Lacan: Mirror Stage
The order of
{the Imaginary, the Symbolic, the Real}
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Cases Analysis:
Sternberg & Hitchcock
• Sternberg:许多有关纯粹的恋物窥视癖的例证
pure examples of fetishistic [ 'fi:tiʃistik ]
Scopophilia [ ,skəupə'filiə ]
• Hitchcock:同时用两种机制,窥淫癖/恋物窥视癖
both mechanisms of voyeurism[ vwɑ:'jə:rizəm ]
and fetishistic scopophilia
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Goal
It is said that analysing pleasure, or beauty, destroys it.
That is the intention of this article.
• To break down-the relationship between the Cinematic
codes and the formative external
structures
• To challenged—
The pleasure provided by the mainstream
film.
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• Psychoanalysis is not the only but an
important tool,
by examining patriarchy [ ‘peitriɑ:ki ](男权
/父权) . with the tools it provides.
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A. A Political Use of
Psychoanalysis
• fascination of film/ pre-existing
patterns of fascination
• starting point
• the way film reflects, reveals and even
plays on the straight, socially established
interpretation of sexual difference
which controls images, erotic ways of
looking and spectacle.
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a political weapon
Psychoanalysis
• Psychoanalytic theory is thus appropriated
here as a political weapon,
demonstrating the way the
unconscious of patriarchal society has
structured film form.
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phallocentrism
• it depends on the image of the
castrated woman to give order and
meaning to its world.
• it is her lack that produces the phallus as
a symbolic presence, it is her desire to
make good the lack that the phallus
signifies.
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summaries briefly
• the function of woman in forming the patriarchal
unconscious is two-fold
• ①real absence of a penis ②raises her child into the
symbolic (Real order, Symbolic order, Imaginary
order)
• Freud's famous phrase
the frustration experienced under the phallocentric
order
• ultimate challenge: how to fight the unconscious
structured like a language
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B. Destruction of Pleasure
as a Radical Weapon
• the cinema
the unconscious structures ways of seeing and pleasure
in looking.
• Hollywood
reflecting the dominant ideological concept of the cinema
• not to reject the mainstream film moralistically
①but to highlight the ways in which its formal
preoccupations reflect the psychical obsessions of the
society which produced it
②to stress that the alternative cinema must start
specifically by reacting against these obsessions and
assumptions
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• A politically and aesthetically avant-garde
cinema is now possible, but it can still only exist
as a counterpoint.
• The magic of the Hollywood style
• Unchallenged, mainstream film coded the
erotic into the language of the dominant
patriarchal order.
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This article will discuss
• the interweaving of that erotic pleasure in
film
• its meaning
• in particular the central place of the image of
woman
the intention of this article
• analysing pleasure, or beauty, destroys it
• the high point of film history hitherto must be
attacked
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• Not
a reconstructed new pleasure
• nor
intellectualised unpleasure
• but
to make way for a total negation of the
ease and plenitude
of the narrative fiction film
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• It is the place of the look that defines
cinema, the possibility of varying it and
exposing it.
• cinematic codes create a gaze, a world,
and an object
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the voyeuristic-scopophilic look that is a crucial part of
traditional filmic pleasure can itself be broken down
• three looks associated with cinema:
the camera as it records the pro-filmic event
the audience as it watches the final product
the characters at each other within the screen illusion
• free the look of the camera into its
materiality in time and space
• free the look of the audience into dialectics,
passionate detachment
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Further Reading
• Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (London: Hogarth,
1929)
•
Helene Cixous, Keith Cohen, Paula Cohen, The Laugh
of the Medusa (Chicago Journals, Vol. 1, No. 4, Summer,
1976), pp. 875-893 Published by: The University of
Chicago Press
• Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in
the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century
Literary Imagination (New Haven: Yale University
Press,1979)
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