Feminism & The Male Gaze
Laura Mulvey
Introduction
• Laura Mulvey – Male Gaze Influenced by Freud & Jacques Lucan,
Mulvey sees the representation of woman in film & literature (and therefore society in general) as being dominated by a male point of view. Her belief is that the world is a patriarchy and that men have the ‘active’ roles and woman ‘passive’
To look is seen as active
Traditionally
• Men play active roles which drive the narrative
• Women play passive roles and are seen as erotic objects which slow the narrative
• Men far outnumber women
• Female roles are sidelined
• Lead roles for women scarce
Stereotypes
• Bimbo• Female’s physical
attractions such as figure and breasts to overpower the male
• Easy• House wife• Mother• Intelligent yet willing
to settle down
Male Gaze
• Two distinct modes of the male gaze of this era: voyeuristic and fetishistic
• Mulvey argued that women where given two characters types - sexually active female & powerless female
• Films presented images of women that were produced simply for the gratification of male viewers
• Various studies in the 1970s found men to be the dominant characters and decision makers in film and TV production
Importance?• Where women had important roles they were
far more likely to be shown as… - frightened - in need of protection and direction - offering support to the male lead character(s) - not independent or self driven - generally weaker - still objectified sexually • “Women, in any fully human form, have almost
completely been left out of film….” L Mulvey
Fighting Back• Ripleys role is reflective of
feminist ideology. Throughout the Alien series, we see her character grow, change, develop and mature to meet and tackle each situation placed before her.
• Challenges cultural norms• Lt Ellen Ripley introduced
viewers to their first self-reliant and successful science-fiction heroine
• Ripley encounters difficult situations which challenge her femininity
• Still shown as sexual object to both audience and characters
• She has to fight against the patriarchal ideology of the Company, different kinds of male figures and of course, against the Alien
• Distinctive references to gender roles, especially to women's status in the world and to motherhood
Changes in society
• As women's roles change so does media representation. Still objectified but also likely to be…
• Career driven• Intelligent• Confident• Empowered• Able (violent)Remember changes may be made cynically and in
order to make money rather than change ideologies
• How many female action stars who are not attractive?• How many older female stars V male?
A Terminators Feminist Timeline
• T1 – Sarah Connor is hysterical, screaming, in need of rescue
• T2 – Strong, empowered, able to hold her own against Arnie
• T3 – We have female terminator TX (uses femininity to advantage)
• Terminator: Sarah Connor chronicles – save the world
A Modern Representation?
• Uma Thurman represented as powerful and dominant and independent
• Sword stands in for and castrates phallus
• Adopts male characteristics of aggression
• Not masculinised yet in masculine roles
• Use of low angles, and a masculine performance
• Conforms to Mulvey’s theory - job of seeking revenge family is given to the female character thus conforming to stereotypes where women are seen to be possessed with family and emotional
• Tight outfit allows objectification• Voyeuristic pleasures by watching Thurman on
her killing rampage • Remember male director/industry may still mean
male ideologies
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