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Wikipedia

Male gaze

In feminist theory, the male gaze is the act of depicting women and the world in the visual arts[2] and in literature[3] from a masculine, heterosexual perspective that presents and represents women as sexual objects for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer.[4] In the visual and aesthetic presentations of narrative cinema, the male gaze has three perspectives: (i) that of the man behind the camera, (ii) that of the male characters within the film's cinematic representations; and (iii) that of the spectator gazing at the image.[5][6]

Nude Girl on a Panther Skin (1844) by Félix Trutat (1844) shows a reclining nude woman being watched by a disproportionately large male face at the window of her bedroom; the painting "powerfully exemplifie[s]" the concept of the male gaze.[1]

The concept of the gaze (le regard) was first used by the English art critic John Berger in Ways of Seeing (1972), which presents analyses of the representation of women — as passive objects to be seen — in advertising and as nude subjects in European art.[7] The feminist intellectual Laura Mulvey applied the concepts of the gaze to critique traditional representations of women in cinema,[8] from which work emerged the concept and the term of the male gaze.[9]

The psychoanalytic theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan are the foundations from which Mulvey developed the theory of the male gaze and interpreted and explained scopophilia, the "primordial wish for pleasurable looking" that is satisfied by the cinematic experience.[10]: 807  The terms scopophilia and scoptophilia identify both the aesthetic joy and the sexual pleasures derived from looking at someone or something.[10]: 815  Concerning the psychologic applications and functions of the gaze, the male gaze is conceptually contrasted with the female gaze.[11][12]

Background

The existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre introduced the concept of le regard, the gaze, in Being and Nothingness (1943), wherein the act of gazing at another human being creates a subjective power difference, which is felt by the gazer and by the gazed because the person being gazed at is perceived as an object, not as a human being.[13] The cinematic concept of the male gaze is presented, explained, and developed in the essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema"[14] (1975),[15] in which Laura Mulvey proposes that sexual inequality — the asymmetry of social and political power between men and women — is a controlling social force in the cinematic representations of women and men. The male gaze (the aesthetic pleasure of the male viewer) is a social construct derived from the ideologies and discourses of patriarchy.[16][10]

 
In the essay “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” (1975), the critic Laura Mulvey figured out the mechanics of the male gaze.

In the fields of media studies and feminist film theory, the male gaze is conceptually related to the behaviors of voyeurism (looking as sexual pleasure), scopophilia (pleasure from looking), and narcissism (pleasure from contemplating one's self). Parting from the Freudian concept of male castration anxiety, Mulvey said that because the woman has no penis, her female presence provokes sexual insecurity in the unconscious of the male,[10] wherein women are passive recipients of male objectification.[10] The on-screen presence of a woman's body is notable, because "her lack of penis, [implies] a threat of castration and hence unpleasure", which the male gaze subverts through the over-sexualization of femininity.[10] As the passive subjects and objects of the male gaze, the hypersexualization of women thwarts the man's castration anxiety with the sexual practises of voyeurism-sadism and fetishization of the female body.[10] The practice of voyeurism-sadism is the “pleasure [that] lies in ascertaining guilt (immediately associated with castration), asserting control and subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness”, which aligns more with the structure of narrative cinema than does the fetisihization component of scopophilia.[10] Psychologically, fetishistic scopophilia reduces the man's castration anxiety — induced by the presence of women — by fragmenting the woman's personality and hypersexualizing the parts of her body.[10]

In narrative film, the visual perspective of the male gaze is the sight-line of the camera as the perspective of the spectator — a heterosexual man whose sight lingers upon the features of a woman's body.[17] In narrative cinema, the male gaze usually displays the female character (woman, girl, child) on two levels of eroticism: (i) as an erotic object of desire for the characters in the filmed story; and (ii) as an erotic object of desire for the male viewer (spectator) of the filmed story. Such visualizations establish the roles of the dominant male and dominated female, by representing the female as a passive object for the male gaze of the active viewer. The social pairing of the passive object (woman) and the active viewer (man) is a functional basis of patriarchy, i.e., gender roles that are culturally reinforced in and by the aesthetics (textual, visual, symbolic) of the mainstream, commercial cinema; the movies of which feature the male gaze as more important than the female gaze, an aesthetic choice based upon the inequality of sociopolitical power between men and women.[10]: 14 [11]: 127 

As an ideological basis of patriarchy, sociopolitical inequality is realized as a value system by which male-created institutions (e.g. the movie business, advertising, fashion) unilaterally determine what is "natural and normal" in society.[18] In time, the people of a community believe that the artificial values of patriarchy, as a social system, are the "natural and normal" order of things in society because men look at women and women are looked at by men. The Western hierarchy of "inferior women" and "superior men" derives from misrepresenting men and women as sexual opponents, rather than as sexual equals.[18]

Concepts

Scopophilia

The Freudian concept of scopophilia produced two types of male gaze: (i) the pleasure that is linked to sexual attraction (voyeurism in the extreme), and (ii) the scopophilic pleasure that is linked to narcissistic identification (the introjection of Ego ideal), and each type of male gaze shows how women have been socially compelled to view the cinema from the perspectives (sexual, aesthetic, cultural) of the male gaze. In cinematic representations of women, the male gaze denies the woman's human agency and human identity to transform her from person to object — someone to be considered only for her beauty, physique, and sex appeal, as defined in the male sexual fantasy of narrative cinema.[10]

 
The male gaze of a male puppet. (detail of an English pew group, 1740s)

Spectatorship

Two types of spectatorship occur while viewing a film, wherein the spectator consciously and unconsciously engages in the societally defined-and-assigned roles of men and women. Concerning phallocentrism, the spectator views a film from the perspectives of three different looks: (i) the first look is that of the camera, which photographs and records the events of the filmed story; (ii) the second look describes the nearly voyeuristic act of the audience as they view the film proper; and (iii) the third look is that of the characters who interact with each other throughout the story.[10]

The visual perspective common to the three types of look (camera, spectator, characters) is that the action of looking generally is perceived as the man's active role, while being looked-at generally is perceived as the woman's passive role in the story.[10] Based upon that patriarchal construction, the cinematic narrative presents and represents the women characters as objects of sexual desire possessed of a physical "appearance coded for strong visual and erotic impact" upon the male spectator. Therefore, in the narrative of the story (screenplay) the actress does not portray a female protagonist whose actions directly affect the outcome of the story or propel the plot. Instead of representing a female character with personal agency, the actress is in the film to visually support the actor portraying the male protagonist, by her "bearing the burden of sexual objectification" — a condition psychologically unbearable for the actor, the character, and the story.[10]

The condition of woman-as-passive-object of the male gaze is the link to scopophilia, the aesthetic pleasure derived from looking at someone as an object of beauty.[10] Moreover, as an expression of human sexuality, scopophilia refers to the pleasure (sensual and sexual) derived from looking at sexual fetishes and photographs, pornography and naked bodies, etc.; sexual spectatorship is in two categories: (i) voyeurism, wherein the viewer's pleasure is in looking at another person from a distance, and he or she projects fantasies, usually sexual, onto the gazed-upon person; and (ii) narcissism, wherein the viewer's pleasure is in self-recognition when viewing the image of another person.[10] The bases of voyeurism and narcissism are in the concepts of the object libido and of the ego libido.[19]

From the perspectives of male spectatorship, Mulvey said that for women to enjoy cinema, they must choose to identify with the male protagonist and assume his male-gaze perspective in looking at the world and at women.[10] In the essay “If Her Stunning Beauty Doesn't Bring You to Your Knees, Her Deadly Drop-kick Will": Violent Women in Hong Kong Kung fu Film” (0000), the dramaturg Wendy Arons said that the hyper-sexualization of the bodies of female characters symbolically diminishes the threat of emasculation posed by violent women, hence: "The focus on the [woman's] body — as a body in an ostentatious display of breasts, legs, and buttocks — does mitigate the threat that women pose to 'the very fabric of . . . society', by reassuring the [male] viewer of his male privilege, as the possessor of the objectifying [male] gaze."[20]

Gazing at the nude woman

 
The male gaze: In the first version of Susanna and the Elders (1550–1560) Tintoretto shows Susanna directly looking at the spectator gazing at the painting of which she is the subject; aware of being looked at.
 
The male gaze: in the second version of Susanna and the Elders (1555–1556) Tintoretto shows Susannah gazing at herself in a mirror, and thus joins the two old men in their spectatorship of her person and her Self as an object.[21]

In the television series and book Ways of Seeing (1972), the art critic John Berger used the term the male gaze to discuss and explain the sexual objectification of women in the arts and in advertising — by distinguishing that men look at and that women are looked at as the subject of an image, as a representation. Regarding the social function of art-as-spectacle, that men act and that women are acted-upon, accords with the social practices of spectatorship, which are determined by the aesthetic conventions of the artistic objectification of men and women, which artists have not transcended in their production of works of art.[22]

In the genre of the Renaissance nude, the naked woman who is the subject of the painting often is aware of being looked at, either by other people within the scene portrayed in the painting or by the spectator gazing at the painting.[23] Berger analyzes the male-gaze perspectives of two Tintoretto paintings about Susanna and the Elders, a biblical story about a pretty woman falsely accused of adultery by two old men who discover each other spying on Susanna whilst she bathes.

In the first painting, Susanna and the Elders (1550–1560), Susanna "looks back at us looking at her"; in the second painting, Susanna and the Elders (1555–1556), Susanna is looking at herself in a mirror, and thus joins the two old men and the spectator in looking at Susanna-as-spectacle.[21] The male-gaze perspectives of Tintoretto's paintings represent Susanna as nonchalant at being gazed upon in her nudity, whereas the female-gaze perspective of the painting by Artemisia Gentileschi, Susanna and the Elders (1610), represents the bathing Susanna as greatly humiliated at being subjected to the male gaze of two old men — the Elders of the community — whose voyeurism has sexually objectified Susanna in the private sphere of her life.[24]

In the production of a work of art, the conventions of artistic representation connect the male-gaze objectification of women to Lacan's theory of social alienation: the psychological splitting that occurs from seeing oneself as one is and seeing one's self as an idealized representation. In Italian Renaissance painting, especially in the nude-woman genre, psychological splitting arises in the objectified woman from the condition of being both the spectator and the spectacle; social alienation arises from seeing herself through the gaze of the spectator.[25]

Effects of the male gaze

 
The female gaze: in the painting Susanna and the Elders (1610), Artemisia Gentileschi shows Susanna greatly distressed and humiliated at being sexually objectified by the male gaze of two Elders of the community.

In Theorizing the Male Gaze: Some Problems (1989), the researcher Edward Snow said that the concept of the male gaze has evolved into a theory of patriarchy. That being subjected to the male gaze has negative psychological consequences upon the mental health of women, especially from the emotional and mental stresses of continually being asked to perform by and for men to the unrealistic standards of phallocentric masculinity. In comparison to the feelings of a man who anticipated being subjected to the female gaze, the woman's anticipation of being subjected to the male gaze increased her feelings of self-objectification, which induced feelings of body-shame and anxiety about her prettiness.

Given the prevalence of the male gaze in a patriarchal society, the social conventions of conservative traditionalism implicitly teach girls and women how to behave when scrutinized by the male gaze; thus instructions in the social graces for girls include to stand straight and not slouch, to speak politely, not coarsely, and to groom-and-dress themselves in consideration of the opinions of other people, etc. Failure to meet such standards of phallocentric masculinity is personal fault of the girl and the woman for not being the female ideal sought by the male gaze of traditional convention.[26]

In A Test of Objectification Theory: The Effect of the Male Gaze on Appearance Concerns in College Women (2004), the researcher Rachel M. Calogero said that the male gaze can negatively affect the self-esteem of a woman and induce feelings of self-objectification that consequently lead to increased occurrences of feelings of body shame and poor mental health.[27] For most women, a physical interaction with a man does not cause internalized feelings of self-objectification and subsequent negative mental state, but the anticipation of being dehumanized into a sexual object, by the male gaze, does cause internalized feelings of self-hatred.[27]

Theories of the gaze

Matrixial gaze

To address the psychological limitations of the male gaze, the philosopher Bracha Ettinger proposed the Matrixial Gaze, wherein the female gaze and the male gaze constitute each other from their lack of the other; Lacan’s definition of the gaze.[28] The matrixial gaze concerns trans-subjectivity and shareability based upon the feminine-matrixial-difference, which is produced by co-emergence by avoiding the phallic opposition of masculine–feminine. Parting from Lacan's later work, Ettinger's analyses the psychological structure of the Lacanian subject, whose deconstruction produces the feminine perspective by way of a shared matrixial gaze.[29]

In the essay, “Is the Gaze Male?” (1983), E. Kaplan said that the male gaze constructs a false, hypersexualized feminine Other in order to dismiss the sensual feminine within every person innately connected to a maternal figure.[30] That "the domination of women by the male gaze is part of men's strategy to contain the threat that the mother embodies, and to control the positive and negative impulses that memory traces of being mothered have left in the male unconsciousness."

That the mutual gaze, which seeks neither subordination nor domination of the gazer and the gazed-upon person originates in the mother-child relationship,[30] because Western culture is deeply committed to the myths of “the masculine” and “the feminine” to demarcate differences between the sexes based upon the complex social apparatus of the gaze; and second, that said sexual demarcations are based upon patterns of dominance and submission. Such a demarcation of difference between the representations of the sexes privileges the male gaze (voyeurism and fetishism) because man's desire includes the power of action, whereas the desire of woman usually does not include the power of acting upon her desire.[30]

The female gaze

Social inequality

Conceptually, the female gaze is like the male gaze, the action by which women view men and women, and themselves, from the perspective of a heterosexual man.[11] The unequal social power of the male gaze is a conscious and subconscious effort to develop, establish, and maintain a sexual order of gender inequality in a patriarchal society. From either perspective of power, women are socially unequal. On the one hand, a woman who welcomes the sexual objectification of the male gaze might be perceived as conforming to sexist norms that only benefit men, thereby, the woman's welcoming sexist attention reinforces the social power of the male gaze to dehumanize women. On the other hand, the woman who accepts the sexual politics of the male gaze might be perceived as an exhibitionist advantageously using sexual objectification to profitably manipulate the sexist norms of patriarchy for social capital.[11]

That the gaze dehumanizes women into objects of desire is a psychological component of male and female sexuality in Western culture;[30] thus, “men do not simply look; [but] their gaze carries with it the power of action and of possession, which is lacking in the female gaze. Women receive and return a gaze, but cannot act upon it.” In that light, “the sexualization and objectification of women is not simply for the purposes of eroticism; [because], from a psychoanalytic point of view, [the objectification] is designed to annihilate the threat that women pose”.[30] Despite their likeness, the male gaze and the female gaze possess unequal social power; in a patriarchy, the male gaze undermines the social equality of women into positions of gender inequality (subjectivity and submission).

Negating the female gaze

In the essay “Modernity and the Spaces for Femininity” (1988), the cultural analyst Griselda Pollock addresses the visual negation of the female gaze.[31] Using the example of the photograph Sidelong Glance (1948), by Robert Doisneau, Pollock describes a middle-aged bourgeois couple viewing artworks in the display window of an art gallery. In the photograph, the spectator's perspective is from inside the art gallery. The couple are looking in directions different from the sight-line of the spectator. The woman is speaking to her husband about a painting at which she is gazing, whilst her distracted husband is gazing at a painting of a nude woman, which also is in view of the spectator. The woman is looking at an artwork not in view of the spectator. The man has found someone more interesting to gaze at, thus ignoring his wife's comment. Pollock's analysis of the Sidelong Glance photograph is that: "She [the wife] is contrasted, iconographically, to the naked woman. She is denied the picturing of her desire; what she looks at is blank for the spectator. She is denied being the object of desire, because she is represented as a woman who actively looks, rather than [as a woman passively] returning and confirming the gaze of the masculine spectator."[31]

Scopophilia displaced

In "Watching the Detectives: The Enigma of the Female Gaze" (1989), Lorraine Gamman said that the difference between the female gaze and the male gaze is the displacement of scopophilia, which allows different perspectives because "the female gaze cohabits the space occupied by men, rather than being entirely divorced from it"; because the female gaze is not voyeuristic and so disrupts the phallocentric power of the male gaze.[32]

Pursuit of the absent object

In essay “Film and the Masquerade: Theorising the Female Spectator” (1999), Mary Ann Doane said that Freudian psychoanalysis discounted the importance of the female spectator because she is “too close to herself, entangled in her own enigma, she could not step back, could not achieve the necessary distance of a second look”.[33] That the voyeuristic gaze and the fetishistic gaze each is a "pleasurable transgression" of looking depends on the spectator's physical proximity to the person who is the spectacle.[33] In creating space between the subject (the spectator) and the object (the cinema screen), the male gaze perpetuates an "infinite pursuit of an absent object".[33] Such psychological distance — despite physical proximity — is denied to the female spectator because of the "masochism of over-identification or the narcissism entailed in becoming one's own object of desire" — the opposite of what Mulvey said prevented the cinematic objectification of men.[33][10] Using the transvestite metaphor, Doane said that the female spectator has two options: (i) to identify with the passive representation to which female characters are subjected by the cinematic male gaze, or (ii) to identify the masochistic representation of the male gaze as defiance of the patriarchal social assumptions that define femininity as “a closeness”.[33]

Hypermediacy

In "Networks of Remediation" (1999), Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin said that Mulvey's theory of the male gaze coincides with "the desire for visual immediacy" — the erasure of the visual medium to facilitate the spectator's uninhibited interaction with the woman portrayed — defined in feminist film theory as the "male desire that takes an overt sexual meaning when the object of representation, and, therefore desire, is a woman."[34]: 79  Bolter and Grusin proposed the term hypermediacy (directing the attention of the spectator to the visual medium and to the mediation inherent to a work of art) to be a form of the female gaze, because it "is multiple and deviant in its suggestion of multiplicity — a multiplicity of viewing positions, and a multiplicity of relationships, to the object in view, including sexual objects"; as a form of the female gaze, hypermediacy offers more and greater perspectives than the male gaze.[34]: 84 

Feminization of the male gaze

In the essay, “Medusa and the Female Gaze” (1990), Susan Bowers explores the Medusa theory about the feminization of the male gaze, that women who assume the female gaze are societally perceived as psychologically dangerous women, because men both desire and fear the gaze that sexually objectifies a man in the way that the male gaze objectifies a woman.[35] The Medusa theory proposes that the psychological phenomenon of being looked-at begins when the woman who notices that a man is gazing at her deconstructs and rejects his objectification of her.[35] The important aspect of the male gaze is its subdued, unquestioned existence, which is disrupted by the female gaze when women acknowledge themselves as the object of the gaze, and reject such sexual subordination by objectifying the gazing man with their female gaze.[35] Using the illustration Sex Murder on Ackerstrasse (1916–1917), by Georg Grosz, Bower's shows how "without a head, the woman in the drawing can threaten neither the man with her, nor the male spectator, with her own subjectivity. Her mutilated body is a symbol of how men have been able to deal with women by relegating them to visual objectivity".[35] As such, just as in the Ancient Greek myth of the female gaze of Medusa, the male gaze requires the decapitation of the woman — symbolizing her capacity to wield the female gaze and objectify the male character — in order to subjugate the female gaze to the social norms of heteropatriarchy, which demarcates sexual roles as either masculine or feminine.[35]

In the article “From Her Perspective” (2017), photographer and academic Farhat Basir Khan said that the female gaze is inherent to photographs taken by a woman, which is a perspective that negates the stereotypical male-gaze look inherent to "male-constructed" photographs, which, in the history of art, usually have presented and represented women as objects, rather than as persons.[36]

Oppositional gaze

 
The oppositional gaze: The academic bell hooks developed male-gaze theory to account for the exclusion and invisibility of Black women from the male gaze and idealized white womanhood.

In the essay "The Oppositional Gaze: Black Female Spectators" (1997), the academic bell hooks said that Black women are placed outside the "pleasure in looking" (scopophilia) by being excluded as subjects of the male gaze.[37] Beyond the exclusivity of the social signifiers of sex and sexuality as difference, through the theory of the oppositional gaze hooks said that the power in looking also is defined by racism.[37] Parting from her interpretation of the essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" (1975), by Laura Mulvey,[38] hooks said that "from a standpoint that acknowledges race, one sees clearly why Black women spectators, [who are] not duped by mainstream cinema, would develop an oppositional gaze" to counter the male gaze.[37] In relation to Lacan's mirror stage, during which a child develops the capacity for self-recognition, and thus the Ego ideal, the oppositional gaze functions as a form of looking back, in search of the Black female body within the cinematic idealization of white womanhood.[37]

The Black woman spectator identifies "with neither the phallocentric gaze nor the construction of white womanhood as lack [of the Other]", thus, "critical Black female spectators construct a theory of looking relations where cinematic visual delight is the pleasure of interrogation",[37] which originates from a negative emotional response to the cinematic representation of women that "denies the ‘body’ of the Black female so as to perpetuate white supremacy and with it a phallocentric spectatorship where the woman to be looked-at and desired is white".[37] Accounting for the social signifiers of difference that lie outside the exclusivity of perpetuated lines of sex-and-sexuality, hooks curated an organic pleasure in looking, which is not related to the scopophilia originally presented and explained in “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema”.[37][10]

In the context of feminist theory, the absence of discussion of racial relations within the totalizing category [of] Women” is a sociological denial that refutes criticism that feminist film critics concern themselves only with the cinematic presentation and representation of white women.[37] In the course of being interviewed by hooks, a working-class Black woman said that "to see Black women in the position [that] white women have occupied in film forever" is to witness a transference without transformation; therefore, in the real world, the oppositional gaze includes intellectual resistance and understanding and awareness of the politics of race and of racism by way of cinematic whiteness, inclusive of the male gaze.[37]

Queering the gaze

Most applications of male-gaze theory have been about the social paradigm of heterosexual patriarchy: sexually exclusive relationships between men and women. In “Theorizing Mainstream Female Spectatorship: The Case of the Popular Lesbian Film” (1988) the academic Karen Hollinger queered male-gaze theory to develop and explain the gaze of the lesbian woman,[19] which is a mutual gaze between two women — neither of whom is the subject or the object of the lesbian gaze.[19] In lesbian cinema, the absence of male-gaze social control voids the cultural hegemony of patriarchy; women are free to be themelves, personally and sexually.[19] The theory of the lesbian gaze proposes that cinematic lesbians are "simultaneously both [the] subject and [the] object of the look, and consequently of female desire",[19] which is communicated in the narrative ambiguity of lesbian cinema, wherein “the sexual orientation of [the story’s] female characters is never made explicit, and viewers are left to read the [cinematic] text largely as they wish.” Queering the male gaze eliminates the distinction between erotic love and Platonic love in relationships among women, because the narrative ambiguity of lesbian cinema thwarts the heterosexual fetishization of the sexual identity of lesbian women.[19]

 
The Queer gaze: In the painting T.E. Lawrence as a Cadet at Newporth Beach (0000) depicts Lawrence as the young man on the beach being gazed at by a man in the water. (Henry Scott Tuke)

The homoerotic gaze

Male-gaze theory also proposes that the male gaze is a psychological "safety valve for homoerotic tensions" among heterosexual men; in genre cinema, the psychological projection of homosexual attraction is sublimated onto the women characters of the story, to distract the spectator of the film story from noticing that homoeroticism is innate to friendships and relationships among men.[39] In the essay “Masculinity, the Male Spectator and the Homoerotic Gaze” (1998), Patrick Shuckmann said that homoerotic-gaze theory reframes sexual objectification into the practice of othering men and women to deflect attention from the homoeroticism inherent to male relationships;[39] thus, the gaze of the cinema camera renders women characters into both objects of desire and objects of displaced desire.[39]

Using three story-plots in which the male gaze voids the homoerotic gaze in the relationships among the male characters in the story, Schuckmann shows that the visual and thematic purpose of women characters in a movie is to validate heterosexuality as the social norm.[39] The first plot is an action film featuring two men in close-quarters combat; their violence is their implicit engagement with the homoeroticism inherent to physical contact, and use their male-gaze-objectification of the women characters as the "safety valve" that displaces the unspoken, emotional conflict of homoerotic attraction.[39] The second plot is from the buddy film genre, which thematically acknowledges the existence of homoerotic tension between the two men who collaborate to realise a job. By way of allusive jokes and humour, the homoerotic tension is sublimated into the objectification of the heterosexual (man-woman) relationship that each man lives when off the job.[39]

The third plot is the thematic exploration of good-and-evil within a character. In the genre film, Point Break (1991) the female gaze of the woman director presents and analyses homoerotic attraction between the policeman protagonist and the bank-robber antagonist. In the course of chasing and evading each other, each man has opportunity to exercise his homoerotic gaze at the Other man, both as object and as subject of desire, personal and professional.[39] Thematically completing the plot and resolving the story requires that the policeman and the criminal seek the definitive masculine confrontation, the physical combat that will express and resolve their homosexual attraction, and the crime.[39] Moreover, as commercial cinema, and despite the female-gaze cinematic perspective, Point Break includes a pretty woman to look at, a character whose visual function in the story is to continually affirm the heterosexuality of the male characters to the male spectators of the movie.[39]

Criticism

In “The Savage Id” (1999), the feminist academic Camille Paglia rejected the concept of the male gaze as being the objectifying perspective of cinema:

From the moment feminism began to solidify its ideology in the early '70s, Hitchcock became a whipping-boy for feminist theory. I've been very vocal about my opposition to the simplistic theory of the male gaze that is associated with Laura Mulvey (and that she, herself, has moved somewhat away from) and that has taken over feminist film studies to a vampiric degree in the last twenty-five years.

The idea that a man looking at or a director filming a beautiful woman makes her an object, makes her passive beneath the male gaze which seeks control over woman by turning her into mere matter, into “meat” — I think this was utter nonsense from the start. [The male gaze] was formulated by people who knew nothing about the history of painting or sculpture, the history of the fine arts. [The male gaze] was an a priori theory: First there was feminist ideology, asserting that history is nothing but male oppression and female victimization, and then came this theory — the "victim" model of feminism applied wholesale to works of culture.[40]

See also

References

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  3. ^ That the male gaze applies to literature and to the visual arts: Łuczyńska-Hołdys, Małgorzata (2013). Soft-Shed Kisses: Re-visioning the Femme Fatale in English Poetry of the 19th Century, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, p. 15.
  4. ^ Eaton, E.W. (September 2008). "Feminist Philosophy of Art". Philosophy Compass. Wiley-Blackwell. 3 (5): 873–893. doi:10.1111/j.1747-9991.2008.00154.x.
  5. ^ Devereaux, Mary (1995). "Oppressive Texts, Resisting Readers, and the Gendered Spectator: The "New" Aesthetics". In Brand, Peggy Z.; Korsmeyer, Carolyn (eds.). Feminism and tradition in aesthetics. University Park, Pennsylvania: Penn State University Press. p. 126. ISBN 9780271043968.
  6. ^ Walters, Suzanna Danuta (1995). "Visual Pressures: On Gender and Looking". In Walters, Suzanna Danuta (ed.). Material Girls: Making Sense of Feminist Cultural Theory. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 57. ISBN 9780520089778.
  7. ^ Bell, Vicki (2017-01-14). "How John Berger Changed Our Ways of Seeing Art". The Independent. Retrieved 2021-05-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ A Companion to Women in the Ancient World, edited by Sharon L. James, Sheila Dillon, p. 75, 2012, Wiley, ISBN 1444355007, 9781444355000
  9. ^ "6 Female Artists on What the Male Gaze Means to Them". Repeller. 2016-09-22. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Mulvey, Laura (Autumn 1975). "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema". Screen. 16 (3): 6–18. doi:10.1093/screen/16.3.6.

    Also available as: Mulvey, Laura (2009), "Visual pleasure and narrative cinema", in Mulvey, Laura (ed.), Visual and other pleasures (2nd ed.), Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire England New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 14–30, ISBN 9780230576469. Pdf via Amherst College. 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine

  11. ^ a b c d Sassatelli, Roberta (September 2011). "Interview with Laura Mulvey: Gender, Gaze and Technology in Film Culture". Theory, Culture & Society. 28 (5): 123–143. doi:10.1177/0263276411398278. S2CID 144070861.
  12. ^ Jacobsson, Eva-Maria (1999). A Female Gaze? (PDF) (Report). Stockholm, Sweden: Royal Institute of Technology. (PDF) from the original on 2011-10-04.
  13. ^ Stack, George J; Plant, Robert W (1982). "The Phenomenon of 'The Look'". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 42 (3): 359. doi:10.2307/2107492. JSTOR 2107492. By their presence -- most forcibly by looking into your eyes -- other people compel you to realize that you are an object for them, Sartre (1948) argues.
  14. ^ Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power movie review (2022)|Roger Ebert
  15. ^ Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power - Movie Review - The Austin Chronicle
  16. ^ Ritzer, George (August 11, 2004). Encyclopedia of Social Theory. SAGE Publications. ISBN 9781452265469 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Streeter, Thomas; Hintlian, Nicole; Chipetz, Samantha; Callender, Susanna (2005). "This is Not Sex: A Web Essay on the Male Gaze, Fashion Advertising, and the Pose". Archived from the original on 2011-11-06. Essay about the male gaze in advertising.
  18. ^ a b Pritchard, Annette; Morgan, Nigel J. (October 2000). "Privileging the Male Gaze: Gendered Tourism Landscapes". Annals of Tourism Research. 27 (4): 884–905. doi:10.1016/S0160-7383(99)00113-9.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Hollinger, Karen (1998). "Theorizing Mainstream Female Spectatorship: The Case of the Popular Lesbian Film". Cinema Journal. 37 (2): 3–17. doi:10.2307/1225639. ISSN 0009-7101. JSTOR 1225639.
  20. ^ Arons, Wendy, "If Her Stunning Beauty Doesn't Bring You to Your Knees, Her Deadly Drop-kick Will": Violent Women in Hong Kong Kung fu Film", in McCaughey, Martha; King, Neal (eds.), Reel Knockouts: Violent Women in the Movies, Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, p. 41.
  21. ^ a b Berger, John Ways of Seeing (1972) p. 50.
  22. ^ Bell, Vicki (2017-01-14). "How John Berger Changed Our Ways of Seeing Art". The Independent. Retrieved 2021-05-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  23. ^ Berger, John (1973), "Section 3", in Berger, John (ed.), Ways of Seeing, London: BBC Penguin Books, pp. 45 and 47, ISBN 9780563122449.
  24. ^ Christiansen, Keith; Mann, Judith (2001). Orazio and Artemesia Gentileschi. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  25. ^ Sturken, Marita; Cartwright, Lisa (2001), "Spectatorship, Power, and Knowledge", in Sturken, Marita; Cartwright, Lisa (eds.), Practices of Looking: An Introduction to Visual Culture, Oxford New York: Oxford University Press, p. 81, ISBN 9780198742715.
  26. ^ Snow, Edward (1989-01-01). "Theorizing the Male Gaze: Some Problems". Representations. 25 (25): 30–41. doi:10.2307/2928465. ISSN 0734-6018. JSTOR 2928465.
  27. ^ a b Calogero, Rachel M. (2004-03-01). "A Test of Objectification Theory: The Effect of the Male Gaze on Appearance Concerns in College Women". Psychology of Women Quarterly. 28 (1): 16–21. doi:10.1111/j.1471-6402.2004.00118.x. ISSN 0361-6843. S2CID 144979328.
  28. ^ Ettinger, Bracha (1995). The Matrixial Gaze. Leeds, UK: Feminist Arts and Histories Network, Department of Fine Art, University of Leeds. ISBN 9780952489900.
  29. ^ Ettinger, Bracha (1996), "The With-in-visible Screen", in de Zegher, M. Catherine (ed.), Inside the Visible: An Elliptical Traverse of 20th century Art in, of, and from the Feminine, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, pp. 89–116, ISBN 9780262540810.
  30. ^ a b c d e Kaplan, E. (1983). “Is the Gaze Male?”, in Snitow A., Stansell C., & Thompson S. (Eds.), Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality (pp. 309–327). New York: NYU Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctv12pnr6v.28
  31. ^ a b Pollock, Griselda (1988), "Modernity and the Spaces for Femininity", in Pollock, Griselda (ed.), Vision and Difference: Femininity, Feminism, and Histories of Art, London New York: Routledge, pp. 50–90, ISBN 9780415007214.
  32. ^ Gamman, Lorraine (1989), "Watching the Detectives: The Enigma of the Female Gaze", in Gamman, Lorraine; Marshment, Margaret (eds.), The Female Gaze: Women as Viewers of Popular Culture, Seattle: Real Comet Press, p. 16, ISBN 9780941104425.
  33. ^ a b c d e Doane, M. (1999). “Film and the Masquerade: Theorising the Female Spectator” in Thornham S. (Ed.), Feminist Film Theory: A Reader (pp. 131–145). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. doi:10.3366/j.ctvxcrtm8.17
  34. ^ a b Bolter, Jay David; Grusin, Richard (1999), "Networks of Remediation", in Bolter, Jay David; Grusin, Richard (eds.), Remediation Understanding New Media, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, pp. 64–87, ISBN 9780262024525.
  35. ^ a b c d e Bowers, Susan R. (1990). "Medusa and the Female Gaze". NWSA Journal. 2 (2): 217–235. ISSN 1040-0656. JSTOR 4316018.
  36. ^ Khan, Atif (2017-01-04). "From Her Perspective". The Hindu. from the original on 2 June 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hooks, Bell (2003). "The Oppositional Gaze: Black Female Spectators". In Amelia Jones (ed.). The Feminism and Visual Cultural Reader. New York: Routledge. pp. 94–105. ISBN 9780415267052.
  38. ^ Mulvey, Laura (9 February 2009). "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema". Media and Cultural Studies: Keywords. 2001; Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006: Meenakshi Gigi Durham and Douglas Kellner. pp. 342–352. ISBN 9781405150309.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h i Schuckmann, Patrick (1998). "Masculinity, the Male Spectator and the Homoerotic Gaze". Amerikastudien / American Studies. 43 (4): 671–680. ISSN 0340-2827. JSTOR 41157425.
  40. ^ "The Savage Id". Salon. 13 August 1999.

Further reading

  • Neville, Lucy (July 2015). "Male gays in the female gaze: women who watch m/m pornography" (PDF). Porn Studies. 2 (2–3): 192–207. doi:10.1080/23268743.2015.1052937.
  • Hobson, Janell (2002). "Viewing in the Dark: Toward a Black Feminist Approach to Film". Women's Studies Quarterly. 30 (1/2): 45–59. ISSN 0732-1562. JSTOR 40004636.

External links

  • Official trailer for the documentary Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power, which builds on the works of Laura Melvey

male, gaze, feminist, theory, male, gaze, depicting, women, world, visual, arts, literature, from, masculine, heterosexual, perspective, that, presents, represents, women, sexual, objects, pleasure, heterosexual, male, viewer, visual, aesthetic, presentations,. In feminist theory the male gaze is the act of depicting women and the world in the visual arts 2 and in literature 3 from a masculine heterosexual perspective that presents and represents women as sexual objects for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer 4 In the visual and aesthetic presentations of narrative cinema the male gaze has three perspectives i that of the man behind the camera ii that of the male characters within the film s cinematic representations and iii that of the spectator gazing at the image 5 6 Nude Girl on a Panther Skin 1844 by Felix Trutat 1844 shows a reclining nude woman being watched by a disproportionately large male face at the window of her bedroom the painting powerfully exemplifie s the concept of the male gaze 1 The concept of the gaze le regard was first used by the English art critic John Berger in Ways of Seeing 1972 which presents analyses of the representation of women as passive objects to be seen in advertising and as nude subjects in European art 7 The feminist intellectual Laura Mulvey applied the concepts of the gaze to critique traditional representations of women in cinema 8 from which work emerged the concept and the term of the male gaze 9 The psychoanalytic theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan are the foundations from which Mulvey developed the theory of the male gaze and interpreted and explained scopophilia the primordial wish for pleasurable looking that is satisfied by the cinematic experience 10 807 The terms scopophilia and scoptophilia identify both the aesthetic joy and the sexual pleasures derived from looking at someone or something 10 815 Concerning the psychologic applications and functions of the gaze the male gaze is conceptually contrasted with the female gaze 11 12 Contents 1 Background 2 Concepts 2 1 Scopophilia 2 2 Spectatorship 3 Gazing at the nude woman 4 Effects of the male gaze 5 Theories of the gaze 5 1 Matrixial gaze 5 2 The female gaze 5 3 Oppositional gaze 5 4 Queering the gaze 5 5 The homoerotic gaze 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditThe existentialist philosopher Jean Paul Sartre introduced the concept of le regard the gaze in Being and Nothingness 1943 wherein the act of gazing at another human being creates a subjective power difference which is felt by the gazer and by the gazed because the person being gazed at is perceived as an object not as a human being 13 The cinematic concept of the male gaze is presented explained and developed in the essay Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema 14 1975 15 in which Laura Mulvey proposes that sexual inequality the asymmetry of social and political power between men and women is a controlling social force in the cinematic representations of women and men The male gaze the aesthetic pleasure of the male viewer is a social construct derived from the ideologies and discourses of patriarchy 16 10 In the essay Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema 1975 the critic Laura Mulvey figured out the mechanics of the male gaze In the fields of media studies and feminist film theory the male gaze is conceptually related to the behaviors of voyeurism looking as sexual pleasure scopophilia pleasure from looking and narcissism pleasure from contemplating one s self Parting from the Freudian concept of male castration anxiety Mulvey said that because the woman has no penis her female presence provokes sexual insecurity in the unconscious of the male 10 wherein women are passive recipients of male objectification 10 The on screen presence of a woman s body is notable because her lack of penis implies a threat of castration and hence unpleasure which the male gaze subverts through the over sexualization of femininity 10 As the passive subjects and objects of the male gaze the hypersexualization of women thwarts the man s castration anxiety with the sexual practises of voyeurism sadism and fetishization of the female body 10 The practice of voyeurism sadism is the pleasure that lies in ascertaining guilt immediately associated with castration asserting control and subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness which aligns more with the structure of narrative cinema than does the fetisihization component of scopophilia 10 Psychologically fetishistic scopophilia reduces the man s castration anxiety induced by the presence of women by fragmenting the woman s personality and hypersexualizing the parts of her body 10 In narrative film the visual perspective of the male gaze is the sight line of the camera as the perspective of the spectator a heterosexual man whose sight lingers upon the features of a woman s body 17 In narrative cinema the male gaze usually displays the female character woman girl child on two levels of eroticism i as an erotic object of desire for the characters in the filmed story and ii as an erotic object of desire for the male viewer spectator of the filmed story Such visualizations establish the roles of the dominant male and dominated female by representing the female as a passive object for the male gaze of the active viewer The social pairing of the passive object woman and the active viewer man is a functional basis of patriarchy i e gender roles that are culturally reinforced in and by the aesthetics textual visual symbolic of the mainstream commercial cinema the movies of which feature the male gaze as more important than the female gaze an aesthetic choice based upon the inequality of sociopolitical power between men and women 10 14 11 127 As an ideological basis of patriarchy sociopolitical inequality is realized as a value system by which male created institutions e g the movie business advertising fashion unilaterally determine what is natural and normal in society 18 In time the people of a community believe that the artificial values of patriarchy as a social system are the natural and normal order of things in society because men look at women and women are looked at by men The Western hierarchy of inferior women and superior men derives from misrepresenting men and women as sexual opponents rather than as sexual equals 18 Concepts EditScopophilia Edit The Freudian concept of scopophilia produced two types of male gaze i the pleasure that is linked to sexual attraction voyeurism in the extreme and ii the scopophilic pleasure that is linked to narcissistic identification the introjection of Ego ideal and each type of male gaze shows how women have been socially compelled to view the cinema from the perspectives sexual aesthetic cultural of the male gaze In cinematic representations of women the male gaze denies the woman s human agency and human identity to transform her from person to object someone to be considered only for her beauty physique and sex appeal as defined in the male sexual fantasy of narrative cinema 10 The male gaze of a male puppet detail of an English pew group 1740s Spectatorship Edit Two types of spectatorship occur while viewing a film wherein the spectator consciously and unconsciously engages in the societally defined and assigned roles of men and women Concerning phallocentrism the spectator views a film from the perspectives of three different looks i the first look is that of the camera which photographs and records the events of the filmed story ii the second look describes the nearly voyeuristic act of the audience as they view the film proper and iii the third look is that of the characters who interact with each other throughout the story 10 The visual perspective common to the three types of look camera spectator characters is that the action of looking generally is perceived as the man s active role while being looked at generally is perceived as the woman s passive role in the story 10 Based upon that patriarchal construction the cinematic narrative presents and represents the women characters as objects of sexual desire possessed of a physical appearance coded for strong visual and erotic impact upon the male spectator Therefore in the narrative of the story screenplay the actress does not portray a female protagonist whose actions directly affect the outcome of the story or propel the plot Instead of representing a female character with personal agency the actress is in the film to visually support the actor portraying the male protagonist by her bearing the burden of sexual objectification a condition psychologically unbearable for the actor the character and the story 10 The condition of woman as passive object of the male gaze is the link to scopophilia the aesthetic pleasure derived from looking at someone as an object of beauty 10 Moreover as an expression of human sexuality scopophilia refers to the pleasure sensual and sexual derived from looking at sexual fetishes and photographs pornography and naked bodies etc sexual spectatorship is in two categories i voyeurism wherein the viewer s pleasure is in looking at another person from a distance and he or she projects fantasies usually sexual onto the gazed upon person and ii narcissism wherein the viewer s pleasure is in self recognition when viewing the image of another person 10 The bases of voyeurism and narcissism are in the concepts of the object libido and of the ego libido 19 From the perspectives of male spectatorship Mulvey said that for women to enjoy cinema they must choose to identify with the male protagonist and assume his male gaze perspective in looking at the world and at women 10 In the essay If Her Stunning Beauty Doesn t Bring You to Your Knees Her Deadly Drop kick Will Violent Women in Hong Kong Kung fu Film 0000 the dramaturg Wendy Arons said that the hyper sexualization of the bodies of female characters symbolically diminishes the threat of emasculation posed by violent women hence The focus on the woman s body as a body in an ostentatious display of breasts legs and buttocks does mitigate the threat that women pose to the very fabric of society by reassuring the male viewer of his male privilege as the possessor of the objectifying male gaze 20 Gazing at the nude woman Edit The male gaze In the first version of Susanna and the Elders 1550 1560 Tintoretto shows Susanna directly looking at the spectator gazing at the painting of which she is the subject aware of being looked at The male gaze in the second version of Susanna and the Elders 1555 1556 Tintoretto shows Susannah gazing at herself in a mirror and thus joins the two old men in their spectatorship of her person and her Self as an object 21 In the television series and book Ways of Seeing 1972 the art critic John Berger used the term the male gaze to discuss and explain the sexual objectification of women in the arts and in advertising by distinguishing that men look at and that women are looked at as the subject of an image as a representation Regarding the social function of art as spectacle that men act and that women are acted upon accords with the social practices of spectatorship which are determined by the aesthetic conventions of the artistic objectification of men and women which artists have not transcended in their production of works of art 22 In the genre of the Renaissance nude the naked woman who is the subject of the painting often is aware of being looked at either by other people within the scene portrayed in the painting or by the spectator gazing at the painting 23 Berger analyzes the male gaze perspectives of two Tintoretto paintings about Susanna and the Elders a biblical story about a pretty woman falsely accused of adultery by two old men who discover each other spying on Susanna whilst she bathes In the first painting Susanna and the Elders 1550 1560 Susanna looks back at us looking at her in the second painting Susanna and the Elders 1555 1556 Susanna is looking at herself in a mirror and thus joins the two old men and the spectator in looking at Susanna as spectacle 21 The male gaze perspectives of Tintoretto s paintings represent Susanna as nonchalant at being gazed upon in her nudity whereas the female gaze perspective of the painting by Artemisia Gentileschi Susanna and the Elders 1610 represents the bathing Susanna as greatly humiliated at being subjected to the male gaze of two old men the Elders of the community whose voyeurism has sexually objectified Susanna in the private sphere of her life 24 In the production of a work of art the conventions of artistic representation connect the male gaze objectification of women to Lacan s theory of social alienation the psychological splitting that occurs from seeing oneself as one is and seeing one s self as an idealized representation In Italian Renaissance painting especially in the nude woman genre psychological splitting arises in the objectified woman from the condition of being both the spectator and the spectacle social alienation arises from seeing herself through the gaze of the spectator 25 Effects of the male gaze Edit The female gaze in the painting Susanna and the Elders 1610 Artemisia Gentileschi shows Susanna greatly distressed and humiliated at being sexually objectified by the male gaze of two Elders of the community In Theorizing the Male Gaze Some Problems 1989 the researcher Edward Snow said that the concept of the male gaze has evolved into a theory of patriarchy That being subjected to the male gaze has negative psychological consequences upon the mental health of women especially from the emotional and mental stresses of continually being asked to perform by and for men to the unrealistic standards of phallocentric masculinity In comparison to the feelings of a man who anticipated being subjected to the female gaze the woman s anticipation of being subjected to the male gaze increased her feelings of self objectification which induced feelings of body shame and anxiety about her prettiness Given the prevalence of the male gaze in a patriarchal society the social conventions of conservative traditionalism implicitly teach girls and women how to behave when scrutinized by the male gaze thus instructions in the social graces for girls include to stand straight and not slouch to speak politely not coarsely and to groom and dress themselves in consideration of the opinions of other people etc Failure to meet such standards of phallocentric masculinity is personal fault of the girl and the woman for not being the female ideal sought by the male gaze of traditional convention 26 In A Test of Objectification Theory The Effect of the Male Gaze on Appearance Concerns in College Women 2004 the researcher Rachel M Calogero said that the male gaze can negatively affect the self esteem of a woman and induce feelings of self objectification that consequently lead to increased occurrences of feelings of body shame and poor mental health 27 For most women a physical interaction with a man does not cause internalized feelings of self objectification and subsequent negative mental state but the anticipation of being dehumanized into a sexual object by the male gaze does cause internalized feelings of self hatred 27 Theories of the gaze EditMatrixial gaze Edit To address the psychological limitations of the male gaze the philosopher Bracha Ettinger proposed the Matrixial Gaze wherein the female gaze and the male gaze constitute each other from their lack of the other Lacan s definition of the gaze 28 The matrixial gaze concerns trans subjectivity and shareability based upon the feminine matrixial difference which is produced by co emergence by avoiding the phallic opposition of masculine feminine Parting from Lacan s later work Ettinger s analyses the psychological structure of the Lacanian subject whose deconstruction produces the feminine perspective by way of a shared matrixial gaze 29 In the essay Is the Gaze Male 1983 E Kaplan said that the male gaze constructs a false hypersexualized feminine Other in order to dismiss the sensual feminine within every person innately connected to a maternal figure 30 That the domination of women by the male gaze is part of men s strategy to contain the threat that the mother embodies and to control the positive and negative impulses that memory traces of being mothered have left in the male unconsciousness That the mutual gaze which seeks neither subordination nor domination of the gazer and the gazed upon person originates in the mother child relationship 30 because Western culture is deeply committed to the myths of the masculine and the feminine to demarcate differences between the sexes based upon the complex social apparatus of the gaze and second that said sexual demarcations are based upon patterns of dominance and submission Such a demarcation of difference between the representations of the sexes privileges the male gaze voyeurism and fetishism because man s desire includes the power of action whereas the desire of woman usually does not include the power of acting upon her desire 30 The female gaze Edit Social inequalityConceptually the female gaze is like the male gaze the action by which women view men and women and themselves from the perspective of a heterosexual man 11 The unequal social power of the male gaze is a conscious and subconscious effort to develop establish and maintain a sexual order of gender inequality in a patriarchal society From either perspective of power women are socially unequal On the one hand a woman who welcomes the sexual objectification of the male gaze might be perceived as conforming to sexist norms that only benefit men thereby the woman s welcoming sexist attention reinforces the social power of the male gaze to dehumanize women On the other hand the woman who accepts the sexual politics of the male gaze might be perceived as an exhibitionist advantageously using sexual objectification to profitably manipulate the sexist norms of patriarchy for social capital 11 That the gaze dehumanizes women into objects of desire is a psychological component of male and female sexuality in Western culture 30 thus men do not simply look but their gaze carries with it the power of action and of possession which is lacking in the female gaze Women receive and return a gaze but cannot act upon it In that light the sexualization and objectification of women is not simply for the purposes of eroticism because from a psychoanalytic point of view the objectification is designed to annihilate the threat that women pose 30 Despite their likeness the male gaze and the female gaze possess unequal social power in a patriarchy the male gaze undermines the social equality of women into positions of gender inequality subjectivity and submission Negating the female gazeIn the essay Modernity and the Spaces for Femininity 1988 the cultural analyst Griselda Pollock addresses the visual negation of the female gaze 31 Using the example of the photograph Sidelong Glance 1948 by Robert Doisneau Pollock describes a middle aged bourgeois couple viewing artworks in the display window of an art gallery In the photograph the spectator s perspective is from inside the art gallery The couple are looking in directions different from the sight line of the spectator The woman is speaking to her husband about a painting at which she is gazing whilst her distracted husband is gazing at a painting of a nude woman which also is in view of the spectator The woman is looking at an artwork not in view of the spectator The man has found someone more interesting to gaze at thus ignoring his wife s comment Pollock s analysis of the Sidelong Glance photograph is that She the wife is contrasted iconographically to the naked woman She is denied the picturing of her desire what she looks at is blank for the spectator She is denied being the object of desire because she is represented as a woman who actively looks rather than as a woman passively returning and confirming the gaze of the masculine spectator 31 Scopophilia displacedIn Watching the Detectives The Enigma of the Female Gaze 1989 Lorraine Gamman said that the difference between the female gaze and the male gaze is the displacement of scopophilia which allows different perspectives because the female gaze cohabits the space occupied by men rather than being entirely divorced from it because the female gaze is not voyeuristic and so disrupts the phallocentric power of the male gaze 32 Pursuit of the absent objectIn essay Film and the Masquerade Theorising the Female Spectator 1999 Mary Ann Doane said that Freudian psychoanalysis discounted the importance of the female spectator because she is too close to herself entangled in her own enigma she could not step back could not achieve the necessary distance of a second look 33 That the voyeuristic gaze and the fetishistic gaze each is a pleasurable transgression of looking depends on the spectator s physical proximity to the person who is the spectacle 33 In creating space between the subject the spectator and the object the cinema screen the male gaze perpetuates an infinite pursuit of an absent object 33 Such psychological distance despite physical proximity is denied to the female spectator because of the masochism of over identification or the narcissism entailed in becoming one s own object of desire the opposite of what Mulvey said prevented the cinematic objectification of men 33 10 Using the transvestite metaphor Doane said that the female spectator has two options i to identify with the passive representation to which female characters are subjected by the cinematic male gaze or ii to identify the masochistic representation of the male gaze as defiance of the patriarchal social assumptions that define femininity as a closeness 33 HypermediacyIn Networks of Remediation 1999 Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin said that Mulvey s theory of the male gaze coincides with the desire for visual immediacy the erasure of the visual medium to facilitate the spectator s uninhibited interaction with the woman portrayed defined in feminist film theory as the male desire that takes an overt sexual meaning when the object of representation and therefore desire is a woman 34 79 Bolter and Grusin proposed the term hypermediacy directing the attention of the spectator to the visual medium and to the mediation inherent to a work of art to be a form of the female gaze because it is multiple and deviant in its suggestion of multiplicity a multiplicity of viewing positions and a multiplicity of relationships to the object in view including sexual objects as a form of the female gaze hypermediacy offers more and greater perspectives than the male gaze 34 84 Feminization of the male gazeIn the essay Medusa and the Female Gaze 1990 Susan Bowers explores the Medusa theory about the feminization of the male gaze that women who assume the female gaze are societally perceived as psychologically dangerous women because men both desire and fear the gaze that sexually objectifies a man in the way that the male gaze objectifies a woman 35 The Medusa theory proposes that the psychological phenomenon of being looked at begins when the woman who notices that a man is gazing at her deconstructs and rejects his objectification of her 35 The important aspect of the male gaze is its subdued unquestioned existence which is disrupted by the female gaze when women acknowledge themselves as the object of the gaze and reject such sexual subordination by objectifying the gazing man with their female gaze 35 Using the illustration Sex Murder on Ackerstrasse 1916 1917 by Georg Grosz Bower s shows how without a head the woman in the drawing can threaten neither the man with her nor the male spectator with her own subjectivity Her mutilated body is a symbol of how men have been able to deal with women by relegating them to visual objectivity 35 As such just as in the Ancient Greek myth of the female gaze of Medusa the male gaze requires the decapitation of the woman symbolizing her capacity to wield the female gaze and objectify the male character in order to subjugate the female gaze to the social norms of heteropatriarchy which demarcates sexual roles as either masculine or feminine 35 In the article From Her Perspective 2017 photographer and academic Farhat Basir Khan said that the female gaze is inherent to photographs taken by a woman which is a perspective that negates the stereotypical male gaze look inherent to male constructed photographs which in the history of art usually have presented and represented women as objects rather than as persons 36 Oppositional gaze Edit Main article Oppositional gaze The oppositional gaze The academic bell hooks developed male gaze theory to account for the exclusion and invisibility of Black women from the male gaze and idealized white womanhood In the essay The Oppositional Gaze Black Female Spectators 1997 the academic bell hooks said that Black women are placed outside the pleasure in looking scopophilia by being excluded as subjects of the male gaze 37 Beyond the exclusivity of the social signifiers of sex and sexuality as difference through the theory of the oppositional gaze hooks said that the power in looking also is defined by racism 37 Parting from her interpretation of the essay Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema 1975 by Laura Mulvey 38 hooks said that from a standpoint that acknowledges race one sees clearly why Black women spectators who are not duped by mainstream cinema would develop an oppositional gaze to counter the male gaze 37 In relation to Lacan s mirror stage during which a child develops the capacity for self recognition and thus the Ego ideal the oppositional gaze functions as a form of looking back in search of the Black female body within the cinematic idealization of white womanhood 37 The Black woman spectator identifies with neither the phallocentric gaze nor the construction of white womanhood as lack of the Other thus critical Black female spectators construct a theory of looking relations where cinematic visual delight is the pleasure of interrogation 37 which originates from a negative emotional response to the cinematic representation of women that denies the body of the Black female so as to perpetuate white supremacy and with it a phallocentric spectatorship where the woman to be looked at and desired is white 37 Accounting for the social signifiers of difference that lie outside the exclusivity of perpetuated lines of sex and sexuality hooks curated an organic pleasure in looking which is not related to the scopophilia originally presented and explained in Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema 37 10 In the context of feminist theory the absence of discussion of racial relations within the totalizing category of Women is a sociological denial that refutes criticism that feminist film critics concern themselves only with the cinematic presentation and representation of white women 37 In the course of being interviewed by hooks a working class Black woman said that to see Black women in the position that white women have occupied in film forever is to witness a transference without transformation therefore in the real world the oppositional gaze includes intellectual resistance and understanding and awareness of the politics of race and of racism by way of cinematic whiteness inclusive of the male gaze 37 Queering the gaze Edit Most applications of male gaze theory have been about the social paradigm of heterosexual patriarchy sexually exclusive relationships between men and women In Theorizing Mainstream Female Spectatorship The Case of the Popular Lesbian Film 1988 the academic Karen Hollinger queered male gaze theory to develop and explain the gaze of the lesbian woman 19 which is a mutual gaze between two women neither of whom is the subject or the object of the lesbian gaze 19 In lesbian cinema the absence of male gaze social control voids the cultural hegemony of patriarchy women are free to be themelves personally and sexually 19 The theory of the lesbian gaze proposes that cinematic lesbians are simultaneously both the subject and the object of the look and consequently of female desire 19 which is communicated in the narrative ambiguity of lesbian cinema wherein the sexual orientation of the story s female characters is never made explicit and viewers are left to read the cinematic text largely as they wish Queering the male gaze eliminates the distinction between erotic love and Platonic love in relationships among women because the narrative ambiguity of lesbian cinema thwarts the heterosexual fetishization of the sexual identity of lesbian women 19 The Queer gaze In the painting T E Lawrence as a Cadet at Newporth Beach 0000 depicts Lawrence as the young man on the beach being gazed at by a man in the water Henry Scott Tuke The homoerotic gaze Edit Male gaze theory also proposes that the male gaze is a psychological safety valve for homoerotic tensions among heterosexual men in genre cinema the psychological projection of homosexual attraction is sublimated onto the women characters of the story to distract the spectator of the film story from noticing that homoeroticism is innate to friendships and relationships among men 39 In the essay Masculinity the Male Spectator and the Homoerotic Gaze 1998 Patrick Shuckmann said that homoerotic gaze theory reframes sexual objectification into the practice of othering men and women to deflect attention from the homoeroticism inherent to male relationships 39 thus the gaze of the cinema camera renders women characters into both objects of desire and objects of displaced desire 39 Using three story plots in which the male gaze voids the homoerotic gaze in the relationships among the male characters in the story Schuckmann shows that the visual and thematic purpose of women characters in a movie is to validate heterosexuality as the social norm 39 The first plot is an action film featuring two men in close quarters combat their violence is their implicit engagement with the homoeroticism inherent to physical contact and use their male gaze objectification of the women characters as the safety valve that displaces the unspoken emotional conflict of homoerotic attraction 39 The second plot is from the buddy film genre which thematically acknowledges the existence of homoerotic tension between the two men who collaborate to realise a job By way of allusive jokes and humour the homoerotic tension is sublimated into the objectification of the heterosexual man woman relationship that each man lives when off the job 39 The third plot is the thematic exploration of good and evil within a character In the genre film Point Break 1991 the female gaze of the woman director presents and analyses homoerotic attraction between the policeman protagonist and the bank robber antagonist In the course of chasing and evading each other each man has opportunity to exercise his homoerotic gaze at the Other man both as object and as subject of desire personal and professional 39 Thematically completing the plot and resolving the story requires that the policeman and the criminal seek the definitive masculine confrontation the physical combat that will express and resolve their homosexual attraction and the crime 39 Moreover as commercial cinema and despite the female gaze cinematic perspective Point Break includes a pretty woman to look at a character whose visual function in the story is to continually affirm the heterosexuality of the male characters to the male spectators of the movie 39 Criticism EditIn The Savage Id 1999 the feminist academic Camille Paglia rejected the concept of the male gaze as being the objectifying perspective of cinema From the moment feminism began to solidify its ideology in the early 70s Hitchcock became a whipping boy for feminist theory I ve been very vocal about my opposition to the simplistic theory of the male gaze that is associated with Laura Mulvey and that she herself has moved somewhat away from and that has taken over feminist film studies to a vampiric degree in the last twenty five years The idea that a man looking at or a director filming a beautiful woman makes her an object makes her passive beneath the male gaze which seeks control over woman by turning her into mere matter into meat I think this was utter nonsense from the start The male gaze was formulated by people who knew nothing about the history of painting or sculpture the history of the fine arts The male gaze was an a priori theory First there was feminist ideology asserting that history is nothing but male oppression and female victimization and then came this theory the victim model of feminism applied wholesale to works of culture 40 See also EditGaze Imperial gaze Screen theory White gazeReferences Edit Hoy Pat C DiYanni Robert 1999 11 23 Encounters Essays for Exploration and Inquiry McGraw Hill Companies Incorporated pp IV ISBN 978 0 07 229045 5 Feminist Aesthetics Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2015 Assumes a standard point of view that is masculine and heterosexual The phrase male gaze refers to the frequent framing of objects of visual art so that the viewer is situated in a masculine position of appreciation That the male gaze applies to literature and to the visual arts Luczynska Holdys Malgorzata 2013 Soft Shed Kisses Re visioning the Femme Fatale in English Poetry of the 19th Century Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 15 Eaton E W September 2008 Feminist Philosophy of Art Philosophy Compass Wiley Blackwell 3 5 873 893 doi 10 1111 j 1747 9991 2008 00154 x Devereaux Mary 1995 Oppressive Texts Resisting Readers and the Gendered Spectator The New Aesthetics In Brand Peggy Z Korsmeyer Carolyn eds Feminism and tradition in aesthetics University Park Pennsylvania Penn State University Press p 126 ISBN 9780271043968 Walters Suzanna Danuta 1995 Visual Pressures On Gender and Looking In Walters Suzanna Danuta ed Material Girls Making Sense of Feminist Cultural Theory Berkeley California University of California Press p 57 ISBN 9780520089778 Bell Vicki 2017 01 14 How John Berger Changed Our Ways of Seeing Art The Independent Retrieved 2021 05 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link A Companion to Women in the Ancient World edited by Sharon L James Sheila Dillon p 75 2012 Wiley ISBN 1444355007 9781444355000 6 Female Artists on What the Male Gaze Means to Them Repeller 2016 09 22 Retrieved 2021 03 03 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Mulvey Laura Autumn 1975 Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema Screen 16 3 6 18 doi 10 1093 screen 16 3 6 Also available as Mulvey Laura 2009 Visual pleasure and narrative cinema in Mulvey Laura ed Visual and other pleasures 2nd ed Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire England New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 14 30 ISBN 9780230576469 Pdf via Amherst College Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Sassatelli Roberta September 2011 Interview with Laura Mulvey Gender Gaze and Technology in Film Culture Theory Culture amp Society 28 5 123 143 doi 10 1177 0263276411398278 S2CID 144070861 Jacobsson Eva Maria 1999 A Female Gaze PDF Report Stockholm Sweden Royal Institute of Technology Archived PDF from the original on 2011 10 04 Stack George J Plant Robert W 1982 The Phenomenon of The Look Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 42 3 359 doi 10 2307 2107492 JSTOR 2107492 By their presence most forcibly by looking into your eyes other people compel you to realize that you are an object for them Sartre 1948 argues Brainwashed Sex Camera Power movie review 2022 Roger Ebert Brainwashed Sex Camera Power Movie Review The Austin Chronicle Ritzer George August 11 2004 Encyclopedia of Social Theory SAGE Publications ISBN 9781452265469 via Google Books Streeter Thomas Hintlian Nicole Chipetz Samantha Callender Susanna 2005 This is Not Sex A Web Essay on the Male Gaze Fashion Advertising and the Pose Archived from the original on 2011 11 06 Essay about the male gaze in advertising a b Pritchard Annette Morgan Nigel J October 2000 Privileging the Male Gaze Gendered Tourism Landscapes Annals of Tourism Research 27 4 884 905 doi 10 1016 S0160 7383 99 00113 9 a b c d e f Hollinger Karen 1998 Theorizing Mainstream Female Spectatorship The Case of the Popular Lesbian Film Cinema Journal 37 2 3 17 doi 10 2307 1225639 ISSN 0009 7101 JSTOR 1225639 Arons Wendy If Her Stunning Beauty Doesn t Bring You to Your Knees Her Deadly Drop kick Will Violent Women in Hong Kong Kung fu Film in McCaughey Martha King Neal eds Reel Knockouts Violent Women in the Movies Austin Texas University of Texas Press p 41 a b Berger John Ways of Seeing 1972 p 50 Bell Vicki 2017 01 14 How John Berger Changed Our Ways of Seeing Art The Independent Retrieved 2021 05 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Berger John 1973 Section 3 in Berger John ed Ways of Seeing London BBC Penguin Books pp 45 and 47 ISBN 9780563122449 Christiansen Keith Mann Judith 2001 Orazio and Artemesia Gentileschi Metropolitan Museum of Art Sturken Marita Cartwright Lisa 2001 Spectatorship Power and Knowledge in Sturken Marita Cartwright Lisa eds Practices of Looking An Introduction to Visual Culture Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 81 ISBN 9780198742715 Snow Edward 1989 01 01 Theorizing the Male Gaze Some Problems Representations 25 25 30 41 doi 10 2307 2928465 ISSN 0734 6018 JSTOR 2928465 a b Calogero Rachel M 2004 03 01 A Test of Objectification Theory The Effect of the Male Gaze on Appearance Concerns in College Women Psychology of Women Quarterly 28 1 16 21 doi 10 1111 j 1471 6402 2004 00118 x ISSN 0361 6843 S2CID 144979328 Ettinger Bracha 1995 The Matrixial Gaze Leeds UK Feminist Arts and Histories Network Department of Fine Art University of Leeds ISBN 9780952489900 Ettinger Bracha 1996 The With in visible Screen in de Zegher M Catherine ed Inside the Visible An Elliptical Traverse of 20th century Art in of and from the Feminine Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press pp 89 116 ISBN 9780262540810 a b c d e Kaplan E 1983 Is the Gaze Male in Snitow A Stansell C amp Thompson S Eds Powers of Desire The Politics of Sexuality pp 309 327 New York NYU Press doi 10 2307 j ctv12pnr6v 28 a b Pollock Griselda 1988 Modernity and the Spaces for Femininity in Pollock Griselda ed Vision and Difference Femininity Feminism and Histories of Art London New York Routledge pp 50 90 ISBN 9780415007214 Abridgement available at Pollock Griselda 1992 Modernity and the Spaces for Femininity in Broude Norma Garrard Mary D eds The Expanding Discourse Feminism and Art History New York City New York Icon Editions pp 245 267 ISBN 9780064302074 Pdf Gamman Lorraine 1989 Watching the Detectives The Enigma of the Female Gaze in Gamman Lorraine Marshment Margaret eds The Female Gaze Women as Viewers of Popular Culture Seattle Real Comet Press p 16 ISBN 9780941104425 a b c d e Doane M 1999 Film and the Masquerade Theorising the Female Spectator in Thornham S Ed Feminist Film Theory A Reader pp 131 145 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press doi 10 3366 j ctvxcrtm8 17 a b Bolter Jay David Grusin Richard 1999 Networks of Remediation in Bolter Jay David Grusin Richard eds Remediation Understanding New Media Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press pp 64 87 ISBN 9780262024525 a b c d e Bowers Susan R 1990 Medusa and the Female Gaze NWSA Journal 2 2 217 235 ISSN 1040 0656 JSTOR 4316018 Khan Atif 2017 01 04 From Her Perspective The Hindu Archived from the original on 2 June 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2017 a b c d e f g h i Hooks Bell 2003 The Oppositional Gaze Black Female Spectators In Amelia Jones ed The Feminism and Visual Cultural Reader New York Routledge pp 94 105 ISBN 9780415267052 Mulvey Laura 9 February 2009 Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema Media and Cultural Studies Keywords 2001 Malden MA Blackwell 2006 Meenakshi Gigi Durham and Douglas Kellner pp 342 352 ISBN 9781405150309 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c d e f g h i Schuckmann Patrick 1998 Masculinity the Male Spectator and the Homoerotic Gaze Amerikastudien American Studies 43 4 671 680 ISSN 0340 2827 JSTOR 41157425 The Savage Id Salon 13 August 1999 Further reading EditNeville Lucy July 2015 Male gays in the female gaze women who watch m m pornography PDF Porn Studies 2 2 3 192 207 doi 10 1080 23268743 2015 1052937 Hobson Janell 2002 Viewing in the Dark Toward a Black Feminist Approach to Film Women s Studies Quarterly 30 1 2 45 59 ISSN 0732 1562 JSTOR 40004636 External links EditOfficial trailer for the documentary Brainwashed Sex Camera Power which builds on the works of Laura Melvey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Male gaze amp oldid 1152221200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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