Laura Mulvey’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinem
  • Article

January 2001

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4,014 Reads

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6,089 Citations

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Laura Mulvey

This paper intends to use psychoanalysis to discover where and how the fascination of film is reinforced by pre-existing patterns of fascination already at work within the individual subject and the social formations that have moulded him. It takes as its 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. It is helpful to understand what the cinema has been, how its magic has worked in the past, while attempting a theory and a practice which will challenge this cinema of the past. Psychoanalytic theory is thus appropriated here as a political weapon, demonstrating the way the unconscious of patriarchal society has structured film form.

Citations (1)


... This framework is particularly suitable for analyzing Heavenly Modella, as the play foregrounds issues of female authority, moral integrity, and cultural resistance within the fashion industry. To support this reading, the study draws on Laura Mulvey's (1975) theory of the male gaze, which argues that women in visual culture are positioned as objects of male pleasure and spectatorship. In the context of the fashion industry, this gaze manifests in the expectation that female models expose their bodies for public consumption-a dynamic that the play directly challenges through Thania's refusal to compromise her values. ...

Reference:

Commodification of the Female Body: A Feminist Reading of Ruth Chukwudebe's Heavenly Modella
Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinem
  • Citing Article
  • January 2001

Screen