How typical is your chosen text of it's genre?
As a genre, Social Realism aims to gain empathy from it's audience members for the characters involved in the narrative. Such characters include a protagonist (usually working class, found as part of an under represented minority and striving for an improved life) and a non-nuclear family, which is usually found to be dysfunctional or broken in some way. It may be argued that the protagonist and her family in 'Fish Tank' are part of the under class rather than considered working class as it isn't mentioned that Mia's (the protagonist) mother works, and neither does she, therefore not adhering to the traditional conventions of said genre.
In trying to gain this empathy, the genre uses typical issues (of it's genre) such as paedophilia, children under the age limit (for either alcohol or sexual intercourse), alcohol and depression. It is made clear in this short clip that these factors and issues are apparent in the lives of the protagonist and her family, an example being when Connor, the boyfriend of Mia' mother is at their home and playing with Mia's younger sister, Tyler, all is well, however as soon as he leaves, we find the mother and her two daughters arguing, screaming and swearing at each other. This shows that not only Mia but her mother and sister need a male influence in their lives to restore order to their family setting. This male may act as a father and authoritative figure, or as a partner. A shot of Connor playing with Tyler just before he leaves their home uses an over the shoulder shot to allow the audience to view the scene over the shoulder of our protagonist and therefore seeing what happens from her perspective, and through her eyes. This is a relatively still and clam shot in comparison to one which follows Connor leaving, and the argument breaking out between the mother and daughter. As Mia is in the living room watching her sister and mother argue, she gets up and walks to them in the kitchen, with the movement of the shot being very abrupt and fast pace, following Mia as she moves towards the action. This may indicate that without a male figure, the family is dysfunctional and broken, however with such a figure, the family would fulfil the role of the nuclear family. This is also another narrative convention of the Social Realist genre.
Technical conventions which are used by and usually associated with the Social Realist genre include the use of a Point Of View shot, normally at eye level, following the protagonist or character involved. These are made apparent in the clip, and are used in many ways. When Mia is throwing stones at the window of a flat a few stories up,
Wednesday, 11 December 2013
Monday, 2 December 2013
'Most texts today mix genres.' How true is this of your three main texts?
Post Modernism suggests that genres are often mixed, creating hybrids, parodies or films paying homage to a previous creation. The text District 9 is seen to support this statement, and this is evident in the films conventions conforming to those of both the Sci-Fi genre and Documentary-style genres. The text is therefore considered a hybrid of the two.
The Sci-Fi genre is made significantly apparent during the film District 9, involving the typical conventions of aliens and humans co-existing, space travel and transformations of the body. Other, less obvious aspects of the Sci-Fi genre (for example a futuristic aspect) are made apparent in a subtle manner, with parts of the mise-en-scene making this factor apparent. Examples of these factors include the use of high-technological apparatus and the date at the beginning of the film being stated (as in the future). Other, more apparent conventions of such a gene are also made apparent, for example the co-existence of aliens. This, mixed with the aliens (or 'prawns') being documented in such a fashion supporting the conventions of a documentary-style genre creates a hybrid of two genres. The aliens and humans interact through both the documentary-style filming of the film and the smaller documentaries found throughout.
One scene in particular shows aspects of a documentary-style film, through the use of hand-held recording which follows the protagonist through corridors, from a higher camera angle which may be found to put him at a disadvantage in relation to his power. By being shot from a higher angles, Wikus (the protagonist) may be looked upon by the audience members as weak and lacking authority, which is how he is being represented at this point in the film. This angle, however remaining very short (approximately 2 seconds) in this shot, continues throughout the scene where Wikus is being examined and tested (against his will, again representing him as a weak person) by members of staff. THese characters are filmed in a juxtapositional manner in comparison to Wikus, putting them in a dominating and controlling position. The MNU logos around the scene present the audience with a large corporation, clearly being used to test humans (and maybe aliens) against their will. The scene shows Wikus to have a mutated hand, heavily supporting the convention of the Sci-Fi genre of body transformations., however the documentary-style genre is also supported in this scene through the use of
Thursday, 24 October 2013
Coursework so far, plus notes...
`To what extent are women objectified and
misrepresented in the media by fashion magazines such as 'Vogue' and 'Look'?
Within this essay, my intention is to focus on the
representation (or misrepresentation) of females through media texts of today.
I will be specifically focusing on Vogue [1] and Look [2],
both of which are aimed at women’s fashion within the UK and were published in
October of 2013. My investigation will delve into if the exaggeration of
representation in females is necessary to gratify it’s audience members, how
truthful and accurate the representation of body image is, and finally I will
analyse several articles taken from both magazines to identify any ideologies,
whether they are making stereotypical assumptions that women are purely
interested in fashion, or whether these ideologies are more contemporary.
I will take into consideration the works of reputable
theorists such as Laura Mulvey and her work on the Male Gaze, Jacques Lacan and
his Mirror Stage, John Burger and ‘Ways of looking’, Post Feminism, the theory
of Uses and Gratifications that the audience may acquire and many more.
Laura Mulvey’s theory offers an insight into how the
cinema offers pleasures for it’s audience members, one being scopophilia.
Despite this being based on film, we can relate the theory to any media text,
whether this be in the form of television, film or print. In section III
‘Women as Image, Man as Bearer of the Look’ of Visual Pleasure and Narrative
Cinema (1975) [3], Mulvey defines the Male Gaze as ‘In their
traditional exhibitionist role women are simultaneously looked at and
displayed, with their appearance coded for strong visual and erotic impact so
that they can be said to connote to-be-looked-at-ness. Woman displayed as
sexual object is the leit-motif of erotic spectacle: from
pin-ups to striptease, from Ziegfeld to Busby Berkeley, she holds the
look, plays to and signifies male desire’.[3a] There is a
tendency to apply the Male Gaze to other forms of media, such a print, however
this is more closely related to the cinematic gaze, rather than that found in
print.
NEED TO FINISH – REFER TO A SPECIFIC ARTICLE
As mentioned previously, I will firstly talk about the
exaggeration of representation of women, and whether this is necessary in order
to gratify its audience’s needs. Whilst researching, I came across an article
written by the Daily Mail around the topic of clothes size. It stated that a UK
Size 16 is ‘Britain's most common dress size’ [4]. Articles
like this contradict the stereotypical ideology that a slimmer size 8 is the
average size (or the desired size) that is ‘advertised’ in magazines. There is
however, a huge difference between what the average size is and what the
desired average size is. The average size has been found in the UK at a 16,
however magazines such as Vogue and Look do not advertise brands or products
using models of this size, in fact I can’t remember the last time that I saw a
model of this size in either of these magazines.
(REFERENCE TO A SPECIFIC ARTICLE FROM EITHER MAGAZINE)
This representation of women can be exaggerated in
several ways, examples including clothes size, airbrushing, the use of
celebrities or icons rather than day-to-day women,
A content analysis of the latest edition of both Vogue
and Look magazines found than an astonishing amount of advertisements contain
female models no larger than a clothes size 6. 132 in Vogue compared to a mere
37 advertisements in Look contained female models of this size [1]
[2]. I also found there to be approximately 8 size 8 models in Vogue,
in comparison to 23 in Look. Taking into consideration that Vogue contains more
than four times the amount of pages than look does, and contains more
advertisements as a whole (rather than articles etc.), Vogue is still showing
more size 6 models in proportion to it's other advertisements than Look are.
Over all, the number of models found in these editions that were found at and
larger size than an 8 were astoundingly small. 6 were found in Vogue, and 3 in
Look (both of which only showed models no larger than a British clothes size
12). This will no doubt convince the magazine's audience that this is the way
that they are meant to look, if naturally sized women are not represented at
all in these magazines, then why would women think that it is something to
strive for? They wouldn't. Vogue as a magazine contains a larger amount of
advertisements rather than articles and stories, in comparison to Look, which
has just been proved by the statistics given. Because of this, Vogue's
intentions and motives may be seen to differ compared to those of Look
Magazine, which contains articles on the latest celebrity relationships, gossip
articles and affordable fashion. These sorts of articles tend to gratify
the needs of it's audience members by giving them an insight into the latest
celebrity news and gossip. By doing this, Look (as a magazine) is in a way
advertising the celebrity as a lifestyle choice, in comparison to Vogue, which
I have found to be advertising a specific product, name or brand. Therefore,
Vogue is seen to be directly advertising a specific product, whereas Look are
advertising a certain style, and showing the audience how to achieve this style
through the brands directly advertised in Vogue (or similar products at a much
more affordable price).
By exaggerating and therefore misrepresenting the
number of size six to eight women in the UK, these statistics place an emphasis
on the ideologies that have been created by the media.
A study published on the 15th of August of 2013 showed
an audit of all UK-based magazines and their circulation within the first half
of this year [5]. This showed Look to be fifty nine magazines away from
the highest circulating magazine of the first half-year, compared to Vogues'
standing at sixty two. This may prove (in conjunction with the number of size
6-8 models in the October edition of both magazines) that magazines containing
larger-sized women may be found more appealing to audience members. And not any
audience members, the target audience for both magazines is of the female
gender, proving that the exaggeration of
representation (in respect to clothes size, anyway) is not necessary. The
reason for Look being higher in circulation than Vogue may come down to several
other contributive factors however, including a lower price of £1.80 [2] in comparison to Vogue’s £3.99 [1] and local, more affordable and
easily accessible brands being advertised. As mentioned previously, the
target audience for both magazines has been found to be females, and this can
be supported by journalism columns from opinion-based sources such a Journalism
students studying at the University of Winchester, and factual-based sources
such as The Guardian. The producer of the column written about Vogue magazine
stated that; ‘Vogue’s target audience
is females in their late twenties to thirties.’ and that ‘Since joining Vogue in the late 1980’s, Editor Anna Wintour has worked
to protect the magazine's status and reputation among fashion publications.
Wintour changed the focus of the magazine in order to do so. She focused on
more accessible ideas of "fashion" to suit a wider audience. This
allowed Wintour to keep a high circulation while discovering new trends that a
broader audience could afford. Wintour also departed from her predecessors'
tendency to portray a woman’s face alone on the front cover. This, according to
the Times', gave "greater importance to both her clothing and her body.’ Both of these comments allow us to understand that as
a female editor, Anna Wintour’s initial aim was ne ver to objectify the female
models used in her magazine, but to allow people to look at the model as a
whole (body included) rather than just a face, whether this lead to the
objectification of women or not, is however another story. [6]
Bibliography
[1]
Vogue Magazine, October Edition (A monthly magazine)
[2]
Look Magazine, October Edition (Published 7th
October: A weekly magazine)
[3]
[4]
[5]
Published 15th August 013
[6]
THEORISTS:
Laura Mulvey
Jacques Lacan
Hyper reality
Uses and Gratification
Post Feminism
John Burger: Ways of Seeing
Aim 1: Does female representation have to be
exaggerated in order to gratify the needs of it’s audience.
Aim 2: How truthful is the representation of body
image?
Aim 3: Article analysis, looking into ideologies.
Size 16 is ‘normal’ and now our average, in
comparison to 195 where the average was 7 inches slimmer and a stone lighter.
http://eprints.ru.ac.za/2303/1/NDZAMELA-MJourn-TR02-129.pdf
University dissertation research
http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/magazine-abcs-full-circulation-round-first-half-2013
Published 15th August 013
Magazine Circulation stats: First half of
2013
Here is a full breakdown for UK magazine
sales in the first half of 2013 as measured by ABC.
Name of magazine
|
% paid for
|
avg sale
|
change y/y
|
Look
|
90%
|
200265
|
-19.9%
|
No.59
Vogue
|
94%
|
193007
|
-5.9%
|
No. 62
Out of a possible
5 criticisms of women’s portrayal in magazines
Beauty Redefined Blog
AIM 2
Is the representation of women’s body
image truthful?
-
Clothes size:
using unrealistic models, or photo shopping realistic models to make them look
unrealistic, or copying their head onto another, slimmer body.
-
Face:
airbrushing (make-up, hair extensions)
-
Clothing
(sense of style, shoes, objectification: short skirts/dresses etc.)
AIM 3
Article Analysis: ideologies (of what?)
-
Real women?
-
Affordable/Not
affordable clothing?
Friday, 18 October 2013
Coursework Research: Notes
Laura Mulvey: The Male Gaze
Sigmund Freud: Scopophilia
Jacques Lacan: The Mirror and The Gaze
Jacques Lacan: ' The split between the eye and the gaze" (1964) In the Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalogy.
Jacques Lacan derives the concept of the split by recasting central Freudian concepts such as unconsciousness and the compulsion to repeat.
The gaze alienates subjects from themselves by causing the subject to identify with itself as the objet a , the object of the drives, thus desiring scopic satisfaction. Yet, in constructing the human subject as this objet a , the gaze denies the subject its full subjectivity. The subject is reduced to being the object of desire and, in identifying with this object, it becomes alienated from itself.
http://csmt.uchicago.edu/annotations/lacansplit.htm
Here, Jacque Lacan's theory explains how 'the gaze alienates a subject from themselves by causing the subject to identify with itself as the object...thus desiring scopic satisfaction.' This is easily relatable to the two magazines that I have analysed (or any magazine) in which female models are used to advertise a product. In using females to present a product in an attractive and desirable manner, the models will become...
Sigmund Freud: Scopophilia
Jacques Lacan: The Mirror and The Gaze
Lacan introduces the mirror stage, a developmental stage that he observed in infants from 6 to about 18 months. In this stage, the infant recognises him or herself in the mirror as a whole entity instead of the fragmented movements and undefined boundaries between self and other (baby and mom especially) that have constituted his or her world up to that point. Lacan says this shows that the infant has desires to see him or herself as an "I." The vision in the mirror, which comes at a time when the infant doesn't have control over his or her own body yet, gives that image of the "I" as a "mirage" of control and "perfect self" or imago. Conversely, this imago has "the effect in man of an organic insufficiency in his natural reality"; it creates a permanent sense of being imperfect, but looking forward to perfection.
http://web.utk.edu/~misty/486lacan.html
This quote refers to the use of a mirror by a child, leading them to see the mirrored image of themselves as the 'ideal', and therefore pushing them to strive for an ideal which in a way, has already been achieved. This 'perfect self' mentioned in the quote above is similar to the ideal that children strive to achieve after first seeing their own reflection in the mirror, however at such an age, they are in no place to control their own body and it's developments yet anyway, leaving them unable to change their appearances. This takes place between he ages of approximately 6 and 18 months.
Jacques Lacan: ' The split between the eye and the gaze" (1964) In the Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalogy.
Jacques Lacan derives the concept of the split by recasting central Freudian concepts such as unconsciousness and the compulsion to repeat.
The gaze alienates subjects from themselves by causing the subject to identify with itself as the objet a , the object of the drives, thus desiring scopic satisfaction. Yet, in constructing the human subject as this objet a , the gaze denies the subject its full subjectivity. The subject is reduced to being the object of desire and, in identifying with this object, it becomes alienated from itself.
http://csmt.uchicago.edu/annotations/lacansplit.htm
Here, Jacque Lacan's theory explains how 'the gaze alienates a subject from themselves by causing the subject to identify with itself as the object...thus desiring scopic satisfaction.' This is easily relatable to the two magazines that I have analysed (or any magazine) in which female models are used to advertise a product. In using females to present a product in an attractive and desirable manner, the models will become...
Monday, 14 October 2013
Coursework Research: Links and Quotes
Laura Mulvey's Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema (1975)
'The cinema offers a number of possible pleasures. One is scopophilia. There are circumstances in which looking itself is a source of pleasure, just as, in the reverse formation, there is pleasure in being looked at. Originally. in his Three Essays on Sexuality, Freud isolated scopophilia as one of the component instincts of sexuality which exist as drives quite independently of the erotogenic zones.'
'At this point he associated scopophilia with taking other people as objects, subjecting them to a controlling and curious gaze.'
III. Woman as Image, Man as Bearer of the Look
A. In a world ordered by sexual imbalance, pleasure in looking has been split
between active/male and passive/female. The determining male gaze projects its
phantasy on to the female form which is styled accordingly. In their traditional
exhibitionist role women are simultaneously looked at and displayed, with their
appearance coded for strong visual and erotic impact so that they can be said to
connote to-be-looked-at-ness. Woman displayed as sexual object is the leit-motif of
erotic spectacle: from pin-ups to striptease, from Ziegfeld to Busby Berkeley, she holds the look, plays to and signifies male desire. Mainstream film neatly combined
spectacle and narrative. (Note, however, how the musical song-and-dance numbers
break the flow of the diegesis.) The presence of woman is an indispensable element
of spectacle in normal narrative film, , yet her visual presence tends to work against
the development of a story line, to freeze the flow of action in moments of erotic
contemplation. This alien presence then has to be integrated into cohesion with the
narrative. As Budd Boetticher has put it:
"What counts is what the heroine provokes, or rather what she represents. She is the
one, or rather the love or fear she inspires in the hero, or else the concern he feels
for her, who makes him act the way he does. In herself the woman has not the
slightest importance."
(A recent tendency in narrative film has been to dispense with this problem altogether; hence the development of what Molly Haskell has called the ' buddy movie,' in which the active homosexual eroticism of the central male figures can carry the story without distraction.) Traditionally, the woman displayed has functioned on two levels: as erotic object for the characters within the screen story, and as erotic object for the spectator within the auditorium, with a shifting tension between the looks on either side of the screen. For instance, the device of the show- girl allows the two looks to be unified technically without any apparent break in the diegesis. A woman performs within the narrative, the gaze of the spectator and that of the male characters in the film are neatly combined without breaking narrative verisimilitude. For a moment the sexual impact of the performing woman takes the film into a no-man's-land outside its own time and space. Thus Marilyn Monroe's first appearance in The River of No Return and Lauren Bacall's songs in To Have or Have Not. Similarly, conventional close-ups of legs (Dietrich, for instance) or a face (Garbo) integrate into the narrative a different mode of eroticism. One part of a fragmented body destroys the Renaissance space, the illusion of depth demanded by the narrative, it gives flatness, the quality of a cut-out or icon rather than verisimiIitude to the screen.
B. An active/passive heterosexual division of labor has similarly controlled narrative structure. According to the principles of the ruling ideology and the psychical structures that back it up, the male figure cannot bear the burden of sexual objectification. Man is reluctant to gaze at his exhibitionist like. Hence the split between spectacle and narrative supports the man's role as the active one of forwarding the story, making things happen. The man controls the film phantasy and also emerges as the representative of power in a further sense: as the bearer of the look of the spectator, transferring it behind the screen to neutralise the extra- diegetic tendencies represented by woman as spectacle. This is made possible through the processes set in motion by structuring the film around a main controlling figure with whom the spectator can identify. As the spectator identifies with the main male protagonist, he projects his look on to that of his like, his screen surrogate, so that the power of the male protagonist as he controls events coincides with the active power of the erotic look, both giving a satisfying sense of omnipotence. A male movie star's glamorous characteristics are thus not those of the erotic object of the gaze, but those of the more perfect, more complete, more powerful ideal ego conceived in the original moment of recognition in front of the mirror. The character in the story can make things happen and control events better than the subject/spectator, just as the image in the mirror was more in control of motor coordination. In contrast to woman as icon, the active male figure (the ego ideal of the identification process) demands a three-dimensional space corresponding to that of the mirror-recognition in which the alienated subject internalised his own representation of this imaginary existence. He is a figure in a landscape. Here the function of film is to reproduce as accurately as possible the so-called natural conditions of human perception. Camera technology (as exempified by deep focus in particular) and camera movements (determined by the action of the protagonist), combined with invisible editing (demanded by realism) all tend to blur the limits of screen space. The male protagonist is free to command the stage, a stage of spatial illusion in which he articulates the look and creates the action.
C.1 Sections III, A and B have set out a tension between a mode of representation of woman in film and conventions surrounding the diegesis. Each is associated with a look: that of the spectator in direct scopophilic contact with the female form displayed for his enjoyment (connoting male phantasy) and that of the spectator fascinated with the image of his like set in an illusion of natural space, and through him gaining control and possession of the woman within the diegesis. (This tension and the shift from one pole to the other can structure a single text. Thus both in Only Angels Have Wings and in To Have and Have Not, the film opens with the woman as object the combined gaze of spectator and all the male protagonists in the film. She is isolated, glamorous, on display, sexualised. But as the narrative progresses she falls in love with the main male protagonist and becomes his property, losing her outward glamorous characteristics, her generalised sexuaIity, her show-girl connotations; her eroticism is subjected to the male star alone. By means of identification with him, through participation in his power, the spectator can indirectly possess her too.)
her secret, he longs to see her in the act of committing a crime, make her confess
and thus save her. So he, too, becomes complicit as he acts out the implications of
his power. He controls money and words, he can have his cake and eat it.
(A recent tendency in narrative film has been to dispense with this problem altogether; hence the development of what Molly Haskell has called the ' buddy movie,' in which the active homosexual eroticism of the central male figures can carry the story without distraction.) Traditionally, the woman displayed has functioned on two levels: as erotic object for the characters within the screen story, and as erotic object for the spectator within the auditorium, with a shifting tension between the looks on either side of the screen. For instance, the device of the show- girl allows the two looks to be unified technically without any apparent break in the diegesis. A woman performs within the narrative, the gaze of the spectator and that of the male characters in the film are neatly combined without breaking narrative verisimilitude. For a moment the sexual impact of the performing woman takes the film into a no-man's-land outside its own time and space. Thus Marilyn Monroe's first appearance in The River of No Return and Lauren Bacall's songs in To Have or Have Not. Similarly, conventional close-ups of legs (Dietrich, for instance) or a face (Garbo) integrate into the narrative a different mode of eroticism. One part of a fragmented body destroys the Renaissance space, the illusion of depth demanded by the narrative, it gives flatness, the quality of a cut-out or icon rather than verisimiIitude to the screen.
B. An active/passive heterosexual division of labor has similarly controlled narrative structure. According to the principles of the ruling ideology and the psychical structures that back it up, the male figure cannot bear the burden of sexual objectification. Man is reluctant to gaze at his exhibitionist like. Hence the split between spectacle and narrative supports the man's role as the active one of forwarding the story, making things happen. The man controls the film phantasy and also emerges as the representative of power in a further sense: as the bearer of the look of the spectator, transferring it behind the screen to neutralise the extra- diegetic tendencies represented by woman as spectacle. This is made possible through the processes set in motion by structuring the film around a main controlling figure with whom the spectator can identify. As the spectator identifies with the main male protagonist, he projects his look on to that of his like, his screen surrogate, so that the power of the male protagonist as he controls events coincides with the active power of the erotic look, both giving a satisfying sense of omnipotence. A male movie star's glamorous characteristics are thus not those of the erotic object of the gaze, but those of the more perfect, more complete, more powerful ideal ego conceived in the original moment of recognition in front of the mirror. The character in the story can make things happen and control events better than the subject/spectator, just as the image in the mirror was more in control of motor coordination. In contrast to woman as icon, the active male figure (the ego ideal of the identification process) demands a three-dimensional space corresponding to that of the mirror-recognition in which the alienated subject internalised his own representation of this imaginary existence. He is a figure in a landscape. Here the function of film is to reproduce as accurately as possible the so-called natural conditions of human perception. Camera technology (as exempified by deep focus in particular) and camera movements (determined by the action of the protagonist), combined with invisible editing (demanded by realism) all tend to blur the limits of screen space. The male protagonist is free to command the stage, a stage of spatial illusion in which he articulates the look and creates the action.
C.1 Sections III, A and B have set out a tension between a mode of representation of woman in film and conventions surrounding the diegesis. Each is associated with a look: that of the spectator in direct scopophilic contact with the female form displayed for his enjoyment (connoting male phantasy) and that of the spectator fascinated with the image of his like set in an illusion of natural space, and through him gaining control and possession of the woman within the diegesis. (This tension and the shift from one pole to the other can structure a single text. Thus both in Only Angels Have Wings and in To Have and Have Not, the film opens with the woman as object the combined gaze of spectator and all the male protagonists in the film. She is isolated, glamorous, on display, sexualised. But as the narrative progresses she falls in love with the main male protagonist and becomes his property, losing her outward glamorous characteristics, her generalised sexuaIity, her show-girl connotations; her eroticism is subjected to the male star alone. By means of identification with him, through participation in his power, the spectator can indirectly possess her too.)
But in psychoanalytic terms, the female figure poses a deeper problem. She also
connotes something that the look continually circles around but disavows: her lack of
a penis, implying a threat of castration and hence unpleasure. Ultimately, the
meaning of woman is sexual difference, the absence of the penis as visually
ascertainable, the material evidence on which is based the castration complex
essential for the organisation of entrance to the symbolic order and the law of the
father. Thus the woman as icon, displayed for the gaze and enjoyment of men, the
active controllers of the look, always threatens to evoke the anxiety it originally
signified. The male unconscious has two avenues of escape from this castration
anxiety: preoccupation with the re-enactment of the original trauma (investigating
the woman, demystifying her mystery), counterbalanced by the devaluation,
punishment or saving of the guilty object (an avenue typified by the concerns of the
film noir); or else complete disavowal of castration by the substitution of a fetish
object or turning the represented figure itself into a fetish so that it becomes
reassuring rather than dangerous (hence over-valuation, the cult of the female star).
This second avenue, fetishistic scopophilia, builds up the physical beauty of the
object, transforming it into something satisfying in itself. The first avenue,
voyeurism, on the contrary, has associations with sadism: pleasure lies in
ascertaining guilt (immediately assodated with castration), asserting control and
subjecting the guilty person through punishment or forgiveness. This sadistic side fits
in well with narrative. Sadism demands a story, depends on making something
happen, forcing a change in another person, a battle of will and strength,
victory/defeat, all occuring in a linear time with a beginning and an end. Fetishistic
scopophilia, on the other hand, can exist outside linear time as the erotic instinct is
focussed on the look alone. These contradictions and ambiguities can be illustrated
more simpIy by using works by Hitchcock and Sternberg, both of whom take the look
almost as the content or subiect matter of many of their films. Hitchcock is the more
complex, as he uses both mechanisms. Sternberg's work, on the other hand,
provides many pure examples of fetishistic scopophilia.
C.2 It is well known that Sternberg once said he would welcome his films being projected upside down so that story and character involvement would not interfere with the spectator's undiluted appreciation of the screen image. This statement is revealing but ingenuous. Ingenuous in that his films do demand that the figure of the woman (Dietrich, in the cycle of films with her, as the ultimate example) should be identifiable. But revealing in that it emphasises the fact that for him the pictorial space enclosed by the frame is paramount rather than narrative or identification processes. While Hitchcock goes into the investigative side of voyeurism, Sternberg produces the ultimate fetish, taking it to the point where the powerful look of the male protagonist (characteristic of traditional narrative film) is broken in favour of the image in direct erotic rapport with the spectator. The beauty of the woman as object and the screen space coalesce; she is no longer the bearer of guilt but a perfect product, whose body, stylised and fragmented by close-ups, is the content of the film and the direct recipient of the spectator's look. Sternberg pIays down the illusion of screen depth; his screen tends to be one-dimensional, as light and shade, lace, steam, foliage, net, streamers, etc, reduce the visual field. There is little or no mediation of the look through the eyes of the main male protagonist. On the contrary, shadowy presences like La Bessiere in Morocco act as surrogates for the director, detached as they are from audience identification. Despite Sternberg's insistence that his stories are irrelevant, it is significant that they are concerned with situation, not suspense, and cyclical rather than linear time, while plot complications revolve around misunderstanding rather than conflict. The most important absence is that of the controlling male gaze within the screen scene. The high point of emotional drama in the most typical Dietrich films, her supreme moments of erotic meaning, take place in the absence of the man she loves in the fiction. There are other witnesses, other spectators watching her on the screen, but their gaze is one with, not standing in for, that of the audience. At the end of Morocco, Tom Brown has already disappeared into the desert when Amy Jolly kicks off her gold sandals and walks after him. At the end of Dishonoured, Kranau is indifferent to the fate of Magda. In both cases, the erotic impact, sanctified by death, is displayed as a spectacle for the audience. The male hero misunderstands and, above all, does not see.
In Hitchcock, by contrast, the male hero does see precisely what the audience sees. However, in the films I shall discuss here, he takes fascination with an image through scopophilic eroticism as the subject of the film. Moreover, in these cases the hero portrays the contradictions and tensions experienced by the spectator. In Vertigo in particular, but also in Marnie and Rear Window, the look is central to the plot, oscillating between voyeurism and fetishistic fascination. As a twist, a further manipulation of the normal viewing process which in some sense reveals it, Hitchcock uses the process of identification normally associated with ideological correctness and the recognition of established morality and shows up its perverted side. Hitchcock has never concealed his interest in voyeurism, cinematic and non- cinematic. His heroes are exemplary of the symbolic order and the law-- a policeman (Vertigo), a dominant male possessing money and power (Marnie)--but their erotic drives lead them into comprimised situations. The power to subject another person to the will sadistically or to the gaze voyeuristically is turned on to the woman as the object of both. Power is backed by a certainty of legal right and the established guilt of the woman (evoking castration, psychoanaiytically speaking). True perversion is barely concealed under a shallow mask of ideological correctness--the man is on the right side of the law, the woman on the wrong. Hitchcock's skilful use of identification processes and liberal use of subjective camera from the point of view of the male protagonist draw the spectators deeply into his position, making them share his uneasy gaze. The audience is absorbed into a voyeuristic situation within the screen scene and diegesis which parodies his own in the cinema. In his analysis of Rear Window, Douchet takes the film as a metaphor for the cinema. Jeffries is the audience, the events in the apartment block opposite correspond to the screen. As he watches, an erotic dimension is added to his look, a central image to the drama. His girlfriend Lisa had been of little sexual interest to him, more or less a drag, so Iong as she remained on the spectator side. When she crosses the barrier between his room and the block opposite, their reationship is re-born erotically. He does not merely watch her through his lens, as a distant meaningful image, he also sees her as a guilty intruder exposed by a dangerous man threatening her with punishment, and thus finally saves her. Lisa's exhibitionism has already been established by her obsessive interest in dress and style, in being a passive image of visual perfection; Jeffries'voyeurism and activity have also been established through his work as a photo-journalist, a maker of stories and captor of images. However, his enforced inactivity, binding him to his seat as a spectator, puts him squarely in the phantasy position of the cinema audience.
C.2 It is well known that Sternberg once said he would welcome his films being projected upside down so that story and character involvement would not interfere with the spectator's undiluted appreciation of the screen image. This statement is revealing but ingenuous. Ingenuous in that his films do demand that the figure of the woman (Dietrich, in the cycle of films with her, as the ultimate example) should be identifiable. But revealing in that it emphasises the fact that for him the pictorial space enclosed by the frame is paramount rather than narrative or identification processes. While Hitchcock goes into the investigative side of voyeurism, Sternberg produces the ultimate fetish, taking it to the point where the powerful look of the male protagonist (characteristic of traditional narrative film) is broken in favour of the image in direct erotic rapport with the spectator. The beauty of the woman as object and the screen space coalesce; she is no longer the bearer of guilt but a perfect product, whose body, stylised and fragmented by close-ups, is the content of the film and the direct recipient of the spectator's look. Sternberg pIays down the illusion of screen depth; his screen tends to be one-dimensional, as light and shade, lace, steam, foliage, net, streamers, etc, reduce the visual field. There is little or no mediation of the look through the eyes of the main male protagonist. On the contrary, shadowy presences like La Bessiere in Morocco act as surrogates for the director, detached as they are from audience identification. Despite Sternberg's insistence that his stories are irrelevant, it is significant that they are concerned with situation, not suspense, and cyclical rather than linear time, while plot complications revolve around misunderstanding rather than conflict. The most important absence is that of the controlling male gaze within the screen scene. The high point of emotional drama in the most typical Dietrich films, her supreme moments of erotic meaning, take place in the absence of the man she loves in the fiction. There are other witnesses, other spectators watching her on the screen, but their gaze is one with, not standing in for, that of the audience. At the end of Morocco, Tom Brown has already disappeared into the desert when Amy Jolly kicks off her gold sandals and walks after him. At the end of Dishonoured, Kranau is indifferent to the fate of Magda. In both cases, the erotic impact, sanctified by death, is displayed as a spectacle for the audience. The male hero misunderstands and, above all, does not see.
In Hitchcock, by contrast, the male hero does see precisely what the audience sees. However, in the films I shall discuss here, he takes fascination with an image through scopophilic eroticism as the subject of the film. Moreover, in these cases the hero portrays the contradictions and tensions experienced by the spectator. In Vertigo in particular, but also in Marnie and Rear Window, the look is central to the plot, oscillating between voyeurism and fetishistic fascination. As a twist, a further manipulation of the normal viewing process which in some sense reveals it, Hitchcock uses the process of identification normally associated with ideological correctness and the recognition of established morality and shows up its perverted side. Hitchcock has never concealed his interest in voyeurism, cinematic and non- cinematic. His heroes are exemplary of the symbolic order and the law-- a policeman (Vertigo), a dominant male possessing money and power (Marnie)--but their erotic drives lead them into comprimised situations. The power to subject another person to the will sadistically or to the gaze voyeuristically is turned on to the woman as the object of both. Power is backed by a certainty of legal right and the established guilt of the woman (evoking castration, psychoanaiytically speaking). True perversion is barely concealed under a shallow mask of ideological correctness--the man is on the right side of the law, the woman on the wrong. Hitchcock's skilful use of identification processes and liberal use of subjective camera from the point of view of the male protagonist draw the spectators deeply into his position, making them share his uneasy gaze. The audience is absorbed into a voyeuristic situation within the screen scene and diegesis which parodies his own in the cinema. In his analysis of Rear Window, Douchet takes the film as a metaphor for the cinema. Jeffries is the audience, the events in the apartment block opposite correspond to the screen. As he watches, an erotic dimension is added to his look, a central image to the drama. His girlfriend Lisa had been of little sexual interest to him, more or less a drag, so Iong as she remained on the spectator side. When she crosses the barrier between his room and the block opposite, their reationship is re-born erotically. He does not merely watch her through his lens, as a distant meaningful image, he also sees her as a guilty intruder exposed by a dangerous man threatening her with punishment, and thus finally saves her. Lisa's exhibitionism has already been established by her obsessive interest in dress and style, in being a passive image of visual perfection; Jeffries'voyeurism and activity have also been established through his work as a photo-journalist, a maker of stories and captor of images. However, his enforced inactivity, binding him to his seat as a spectator, puts him squarely in the phantasy position of the cinema audience.
In Vertigo, subjective camera predominates. Apart from flash-back from Judy's point
of view, the narrative is woven around what Scottie sees or fails to see. The
audience follows the growth of his erotic obsession and subsequent despair precisely
from his point of view. Scottie's voyeurism is blatant: he falls in love with a woman
he follows and spies on without speaking to. Its sadistic side is equally blatant: he
has chosen (and freely chosen, for he had been a successful lawyer) to be a
policeman, with all the attendant possibilities of pursuit and investigation. As a
result. he follows, watches and falls in love with a perfect image of female beauty
and mystery. Once he actually confronts her, his erotic drive is to break her down
and force her to tell by persistent cross-questioning. Then, in the second part of the
fiIm, he re-enacts his obsessive involvement with the image he loved to watch
secretly. He reconstructs Judy as Madeleine, forces her to conform in every detail to
the actual physical appearance of his fetish. Her exhibitionism, her masochism, make
her an ideal passive counterpart to Scottie's active sadistic voyeurism. She knows
her part is to perform, and only by playing it through and then replaying it can she
keep Scottie's erotic interest. But in the repetition he does break her down and
succeeds in exposing her guilt. His curiosity wins through and she is punished. In
Vertigo, erotic involvement with the look is disorienting: the spectator's fascination is
turned against him as the narrative carries him through and entwines him with the
processes that he is himself exercising. The Hitchcock hero here is firmly placed
within the symbolic order, in narrative terms. He has all the attributes of the
patriarchal super-ego. Hence the spectator, lulled into a faIse sense of security by
the apparent legality of his surrogate, sees through his look and finds himself
exposed as complicit, caught in the moral ambiguity of looking.
Far from being simply an aside on the perversion of the police, Vertigo focuses on the implications of the active/looking, passive/looked-at split in terms of sexual difference and the power of the male symbolic encapsulated in the hero. Marnie, too, performs for Mark RutIand's gaze and masquerades as the perfect to-be-looked-at image. He, too, is on the side of the law until, drawn in by obsession with her guilt,
Far from being simply an aside on the perversion of the police, Vertigo focuses on the implications of the active/looking, passive/looked-at split in terms of sexual difference and the power of the male symbolic encapsulated in the hero. Marnie, too, performs for Mark RutIand's gaze and masquerades as the perfect to-be-looked-at image. He, too, is on the side of the law until, drawn in by obsession with her guilt,
Cultivation Theory
http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/short/cultiv.html
- Cultivation theory (sometimes referred to as the cultivation hypothesis or cultivation analysis) was an approach developed by Professor George Gerbner, dean of the Annenberg School of Communications at the University of Pennsylvania.
- Cultivation theorists argue that television has long-term effects which are small, gradual, indirect but cumulative and significant.
- Cultivation research looks at the mass media as a socializing agent and investigates whether television viewers come to believe the television version of reality the more they watch it. Gerbner and his colleagues contend that television drama has a small but significant influence on the attitudes, beliefs and judgements of viewers concerning the social world. The focus is on ‘heavy viewers’. People who watch a lot of television are likely to be more influenced by the ways in which the world is framed by television programmes than are individuals who watch less, especially regarding topics of which the viewer has little first-hand experience.
- Audience research by cultivation theorists involves asking large-scale public opinion poll organizations to include in their national surveys questions regarding such issues as the amount of violence in everyday life. Answers are interpreted as reflecting either the world of television or that of everyday life. Respondents are asked such questions as: ‘What percentage of all males who have jobs work in law enforcement or crime detection? Is it 1 percent or 10 percent?’. On American TV, about 12 percent of all male characters hold such jobs, and about 1 percent of males are employed in the USA in these jobs, so 10 percent would be the ‘TV answer’ and 1 percent would be the ‘real-world answer’ (Dominick 1990, p. 512).
- In a survey of about 450 New Jersey schoolchildren, 73 percent of heavy viewers compared to 62 percent of light viewers gave the TV answer to a question asking them to estimate the number of people involved in violence in a typical week. The same survey showed that children who were heavy viewers were more fearful about walking alone in a city at night. They also overestimated the number of people who commit serious crimes (Dominick 1990, p. 512). One controlled experiment addressed the issue of cause and effect, manipulating the viewing of American college students to create heavy- and light-viewing groups. After 6 weeks of controlled viewing, heavy viewers of action-adventure programmes were indeed found to be more fearful of life in the everyday world than were light viewers (ibid., p. 513).
Jacques Lacan's 'The Gaze'
http://keca2media.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/the-gaze-jacques-lacan.html
Lacan and Karen Coats
http://literarytheoryumf.wordpress.com/category/lacan/
http://keca2media.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/the-gaze-jacques-lacan.html
Lacan and Karen Coats
http://literarytheoryumf.wordpress.com/category/lacan/
Sunday, 13 October 2013
Question A2: How typical of their genres are your chosen texts?
The film Sin City proves extremely typical of their genre(s), being Film Noir and Comic Book style. This is proven in several uses, such as the use of Propp's narrative character roles, with the protagonists' all being the typical 'hero', however with a significant weakness, all of which are exaggerated, adding a Film Noir twist. These weaknesses include heart problems (in Hartigan, the first Protagonist we meet in the film), physical appearance (in Marv, the second protagonist), and guilt/paranoia (in Dwight, the last protagonist that we meet). All of these weaknesses present them with an extremely fatalistic approach to life (another typical convention of the genre). Other narrative character roles found in this film include the role of the Femme Fatale, in characters such as Gail (a hooker who at one point is captured and too weak to fight, until the help of one of the protagonists comes along). Other female characters (such as Nancy) also rely on a male character for support, for example 'Please, let me stay close, nothing can happen when I'm close to you', proving their independence, and their need for men at the same time. These character roles are extremely common conventions of the Film Noir genre.
Other conventions, other than the character types from the film include extremely low-lighting (of half of a character's face) for example during a shot of Dwight, half of his face is light, and the other in shadow, representing him as half pure and good, and the other half being dark and mysterious, being Film Noir. This incorporates the other genre of Comic Book style. This style is presented in the black and white filming, which is used throughout the whole film, and incorporating a flash of colour (mostly red and yellow in this film, red representing lust, blood and passion, and yellow -which mostly presents hair- representing the extravagance and exaggeration of the film, making it more than what reality may show in this situation). The use of black and white throughout the whole film, and the pops of colour, exaggerates every situation presented here, keeping the audience in the understanding that this is based on a comic book, and is there for extremely unrealistic and exaggerated, which is what Comic Books are all about.
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Scene Analysis of Fish Tank
The first scene which I will be analysing consists of Mia taking Keira (Connor's daughter) from their street and chasing her to the water's edge of a large patch of greenery near Connor's house.
This scene supports and upholds the traditional conventions of a social realist genre. Plenty of drama, for example the scene where Keira is pushed into the Sea by Mia, and takes a significant amount of time to return to the surface, reinforce these conventions. This part of the scene is made extremely realistic due to the hand-held camera techniques used (also an extremely common convention of this genre) which leads the audience the believe that this situation could potentially be a realistic occurrence. Other conventions supporting this genre (which are evident in this scene) include diegetic sound, plenty of which is used in this scene. Examples of this sort of sound include the crashing of the waves of the sea (which also becomes a substantial part of the scene), the sound of the wind (which is a traditionally found in the location of this film, making the scene even more relatable and realistic) and the words spoken by the characters.
Propp's Narrative theory comes into play with this scene, with the small child (Keira) dressed in a princess outfit (a pale dress; representing the innocence and naivety of the child due to her age), with an extremely sparkly shawl and hair clip. This automatically presents her as the princess, and Mia as the villain, due to the circumstances of this particular scene, in which she is taking her from her father. By wearing black, Mia is automatically assumed to be the villain in this situation. Although this is how Mia is represented in this particular scene, it may not be the case in relation to the film as a whole. Traditionally, the Princess is supposed to be saved by the hero, however in Fish Tank, this is not the case. The princess is put into danger by, and saved by the villain.
In most situations, the villain is very commonly represented as a strong male, however this scene represents this character role as a female, with the same qualities and features of a male. Examples of these features include a strong accent, deep voice, the clothes worn by Mia (tracksuit and trainers) and her lack of make-up and hair scraped back: lack of effort, often associated with male traits.
This scene supports and upholds the traditional conventions of a social realist genre. Plenty of drama, for example the scene where Keira is pushed into the Sea by Mia, and takes a significant amount of time to return to the surface, reinforce these conventions. This part of the scene is made extremely realistic due to the hand-held camera techniques used (also an extremely common convention of this genre) which leads the audience the believe that this situation could potentially be a realistic occurrence. Other conventions supporting this genre (which are evident in this scene) include diegetic sound, plenty of which is used in this scene. Examples of this sort of sound include the crashing of the waves of the sea (which also becomes a substantial part of the scene), the sound of the wind (which is a traditionally found in the location of this film, making the scene even more relatable and realistic) and the words spoken by the characters.
Propp's Narrative theory comes into play with this scene, with the small child (Keira) dressed in a princess outfit (a pale dress; representing the innocence and naivety of the child due to her age), with an extremely sparkly shawl and hair clip. This automatically presents her as the princess, and Mia as the villain, due to the circumstances of this particular scene, in which she is taking her from her father. By wearing black, Mia is automatically assumed to be the villain in this situation. Although this is how Mia is represented in this particular scene, it may not be the case in relation to the film as a whole. Traditionally, the Princess is supposed to be saved by the hero, however in Fish Tank, this is not the case. The princess is put into danger by, and saved by the villain.
In most situations, the villain is very commonly represented as a strong male, however this scene represents this character role as a female, with the same qualities and features of a male. Examples of these features include a strong accent, deep voice, the clothes worn by Mia (tracksuit and trainers) and her lack of make-up and hair scraped back: lack of effort, often associated with male traits.
Wednesday, 25 September 2013
The Male Gaze: Die Another Day
The James Bond franchise is a clear example of film objectifying females and forcing the audience t view females via the male gaze. The scene within 'Die Another Day' when James Bond meets the character Jinx demonstrates my previous statement through the use of vignette in the post production of the film when editing the scene.
By doing this, the producers are knowingly portraying Halle Berry's character Jinx through the eyes of James Bond, and therefore through the perspective of a male. Because of this, Jinx is now looked at as an object, and this is supported by Laura Mulvey's theory in her essay 'Visual pleasure and the narrative cinema'. When editing, the vignette effect puts Jinx at the centre of Bond's attention, and the character is now looked at through the eyes of the male character (one of three ways of looking defined by Mulvey), rather than by individual audience members.
Along with this, the slow motion effects used in editing as Berry's character exits the water further objectify the female character, without the audience even having much of an understanding as to who she may be. This also allows the camera to linger on the character (and her body) for longer than in a regular motion, and therefore objectifying her, allowing the audience's view of her body to last even longer. With this, other actions allow us to understand the exaggeration involved in her exit from the water. By throwing her hands up as she walks to wards the shore and skimming her hands along the water, Halle Berry accentuates her breasts and gives the scene a more sexual (and sensual) undertone, creating an even more intense visual pleasure from the audience, satisfying their scopophilia. During this scene, a mid shot is used to allow the audience to appreciate both Jinx's facial expressions and the movements of her body, and with any other characters from the scene missing, she is alone in the shot, with all focus and all thoughts (of both the male character's who's eyes we are supposedly looking through, and the audience) on her only.
One her exit from the water, the shot flips to Bond's reaction and back again to the female character, where she is out of the water and walking towards Bond. Here, she looks especially groomed considering she has just walked out from being under the water. This creates an ideology in both male and female audience members, leading them to believe that this is the norm and the standard 'ideal' woman after being in the sea.
By constructing and coding the female character in this scene, from something that can be argued as unrealistic, the producers have allowed the representation of the female character to be as they (probably male) would expect from a woman. As 82% of media creators are male, the likelihood of the producer of Die Another Day being female is slim, and therefore the ideals created in this film (in relation to male expectations of the female character) will be predominantly patriarchal. Other factors, for example the bikini worn by Jinx, the way that she exits the water, thrusting her hips in a non-realistic manor and even the way that she dries herself with the towel on the deck (barely at all, dabbing herself, too in a non-realistic way with the towel a couple of times) will have also been determined by this majority.
The non-diegetic music used on Jinx's exit from the water (which was already playing at the start of the clip being analysed) became extremely exaggerated and intensified as her movements and these to aspects put together create and extremely mysterious, romantic and fantasised scene.
Tuesday, 24 September 2013
Laura Mulvey: American Beauty
The scene from American Beauty being analysed takes place during a High School Basketball game in America, where a girl's (Jane) parents are on their way to watch their daughter take place in a performance at half time. Once there, Jane's father notices one of his daughter's friends, and creates a fantasy in his mind, containing her dancing provocatively.
The camera uses various techniques to intensify the scene, for example losing in from an extremely wide shot of the male character alone (without the audience who were previously there) to an extreme close up shot of just the characters eyes. Through these eyes, according to Laura Mulvey, both male and female audience members are socialised into the idea that what the male character deems attractive in a film, actually is. This is called 'the look of the character in the film' and is one of three ways of looking defined by Mulvey. When looking back at this still shot of the male character for a second time, the expression on his face is slightly dormant, difficult to read, but the most predominant and noticeable aspect is that (assuming that he is looking at the female character, which is assumed by the audience) he is looking at her as an object, a piece of meat, rather then a human. This shot is somewhere between a close up and an extreme close up and by objectifying the woman in this way, we are lead to believe that is the norm, that this is expected by men and that this look is something to strive towards by women, in order to be like the women that they see in such films as these.
The camera often fragments a females body when filming to objectify the female character, is this is no different in the scene we are analysing. The camera uses long shots of the girl, with her looking into the camera (which the audience are led to assume that this is the male character as we are watching through the look of the male character) seductively. The camera then moves on to fragment her body, filming her chest and her hands, as she undoes the zip of her dance costume. Because we are looking through the male character's eyes, female and male audience members will be lead to believe that this is an 'attractive' ideology and for females something to strive for and convince them that this is what a male wants to see in a woman.
We also see the expression on the male character's face as he dreams up the fantasy, playing it out in his mind as his daughter is dancing with her friends during the performance, however we do not get to see this as a member of the audience due to the father's fantasy. The character seems to be looking the woman up and down (as an object rather than a woman) and gaining voyeuristic pleasure from her performance.
At one point during the scene, there is a low key lighting on both characters, intensifying the fantasy and allowing the audience to view both characters at the same time, and highlighting the female character to both the male character and the member of the audience. Non-diegetic music begins ot play and adds to the highlighting of the female's role in the fantasy. As red petals fly out of her chest as she unzips her top (which may be used to indicate that this is in fact a fantasy and not reality or to maintain the female's dignity), the colour of the petals may be considered by the audience and indication of lust (rather than love) due to the current emotions of the male character (and maybe even the female character due to her provocative dancing, however this was the male's fantasy and not hers).
The camera uses various techniques to intensify the scene, for example losing in from an extremely wide shot of the male character alone (without the audience who were previously there) to an extreme close up shot of just the characters eyes. Through these eyes, according to Laura Mulvey, both male and female audience members are socialised into the idea that what the male character deems attractive in a film, actually is. This is called 'the look of the character in the film' and is one of three ways of looking defined by Mulvey. When looking back at this still shot of the male character for a second time, the expression on his face is slightly dormant, difficult to read, but the most predominant and noticeable aspect is that (assuming that he is looking at the female character, which is assumed by the audience) he is looking at her as an object, a piece of meat, rather then a human. This shot is somewhere between a close up and an extreme close up and by objectifying the woman in this way, we are lead to believe that is the norm, that this is expected by men and that this look is something to strive towards by women, in order to be like the women that they see in such films as these.
The camera often fragments a females body when filming to objectify the female character, is this is no different in the scene we are analysing. The camera uses long shots of the girl, with her looking into the camera (which the audience are led to assume that this is the male character as we are watching through the look of the male character) seductively. The camera then moves on to fragment her body, filming her chest and her hands, as she undoes the zip of her dance costume. Because we are looking through the male character's eyes, female and male audience members will be lead to believe that this is an 'attractive' ideology and for females something to strive for and convince them that this is what a male wants to see in a woman.
We also see the expression on the male character's face as he dreams up the fantasy, playing it out in his mind as his daughter is dancing with her friends during the performance, however we do not get to see this as a member of the audience due to the father's fantasy. The character seems to be looking the woman up and down (as an object rather than a woman) and gaining voyeuristic pleasure from her performance.
At one point during the scene, there is a low key lighting on both characters, intensifying the fantasy and allowing the audience to view both characters at the same time, and highlighting the female character to both the male character and the member of the audience. Non-diegetic music begins ot play and adds to the highlighting of the female's role in the fantasy. As red petals fly out of her chest as she unzips her top (which may be used to indicate that this is in fact a fantasy and not reality or to maintain the female's dignity), the colour of the petals may be considered by the audience and indication of lust (rather than love) due to the current emotions of the male character (and maybe even the female character due to her provocative dancing, however this was the male's fantasy and not hers).
Representation: The Hunger Games trailer
The trailer of the Hunger Games starts out with a male and female character talking about talking about running away from their lives and starting afresh somewhere else. We soon come to find that the film is set in the near, and this is proven through the technologies and gadgets used in the '12 districts of Panem'. By this being the first thing that the audience see, they are socialised into the ideology that a man needs a woman and a woman needs a man in order to survive this world.
The trailer tells the story of a girl, Katniss Everdeen who volunteers in place of her sister (who is chosen) to compete in the annual Hunger Games, against 11 other district (and 23 other children). We find out that she risked her life in order to protect her younger sister. In relation to most traditional films of a similar genre, the main character (and the one competing) would have been a male, and this twist on tradition challenges many stereotypes about the strength of females.
One of the characters that we come across during the trailer is filmed using extreme long shots, with the mise-en-scene taking the form of a forest. They are dressed in a camouflage-type outfit, and holding a bow and arrows. This indicates that the character in hand is likely to be male, as most stereotypes predict that anyone using weapons in a film will be a man, rather than a woman as traditional stereotypes predict that men are the breadwinners and women the caregivers. As the trailer continues we see the back of the head of a girl, and the representation of females as a gender develops as we come to understand that the main character and what would be classed as a 'Hero' by Propp is Katniss Everdeen.
Another female character represented in this film is Primrose or 'Prim', Katnisses younger sister. She is shown to be naïve and extremely innocent during the scenes within the trailer, and this may have been used to exaggerate the strength that her older sister contains. By using a traditionally stereotypes weakness in the younger sibling, the older sibling is able to challenge the stereotype. Tis is not the only stereotype in relation to gender which may be considered challenged by the audience, as about 20 seconds into the trailer, the male character is already seen as being an aid or help to the main (female) character when shooting for prey, which is something considered a male trait by many. This puts the male character is a position of lower authority than the female character, which in most cases (such as the Nuclear family) and pretty much every gender-based stereotype, defies the norm.
In the scenes containing the contestants training, all ages, races and genders are considered equal, with all shown as relatively strong (shown to be using weapons in self defence and combat), which again differs from most stereotypes, whether this is right or wrong.
Monday, 23 September 2013
Coursework: Draft
To what extent are women objectified and misrepresented in the media by fashion magazines such as 'Vogue' and 'Look'?
In this piece of coursework, my intention is to focus on the representation (or misrepresentation) of women in the media today, specifically focusing on magazines aimed at women's fashion. A popular assumption established within the UK is that the 'perfect' woman is stereotypically a slender, size 8-10 woman with a seemingly perfect complexion, however this stereotype is considered a false misrepresentation. This stereo-typification is supported by the images used in magazines such as Vogue and Look, however both magazines differ in how their women are represented through media texts such as adverts, written articles and interviews. I will be using the theories and work developed by theorists such as Laura Mulvey and the 'Male Gaze', Jacques Lacan, Karen Coats and John Fiske, and talking about why and how women are represented in such a way that many consider to dehumanise them.
Flicking through the latest edition of both Vogue and Look magazines, I have found than an astonishing amount of advertisements contain female models no larger than a clothes size 6. 132 in Vogue compared to a mere 37 advertisements in Look contained female models of this size. I also found there to be approximately 8 size 8 models in Vogue, in comparison to 23 in Look. Taking into consideration that Vogue contains more than four times the amount of pages than look does, and contains more advertisements as a whole (rather than articles etc.), Vogue is still showing more size 6 models in proportion to it's other advertisements than Look are. Over all, the number of models found in these editions that were found at and larger size than an 8 were astoundingly small. 6 were found in Vogue, and 3 in Look (both of which only showed models no larger than a British clothes size 12). This will no doubt convince the magazine's audience that this is the way that they are meant to look, if naturally sized women are not represented at all in these magazines, then why would women think that it is something to strive for? They wouldn't.
As a principal, Vogue as a magazine contains a larger amount of advertisements rather than articles and stories, in comparison to Look. This is over several editions of both magazines, rather than just the one. Because of this, Vogue's intentions and motives may be seen to differ compared to those of Look Magazine, which contains articles on the latest celebrity relationships, gossip articles and affordable fashion. These sorts of articles tend to gratify the needs of it's audience members by giving them an insight into the latest celebrity news and gossip. By doing this, Look (as a magazine) is in a way advertising the celebrity as a lifestyle choice, in comparison to Vogue, which I have found to be advertising a specific product, name or brand. Therefore, Vogue is seen to be directly advertising a specific product, whereas Look are advertising a certain style, and showing the audience how to achieve this style through the brands directly advertised in Vogue (or similar products at a much more affordable price).
In this piece of coursework, my intention is to focus on the representation (or misrepresentation) of women in the media today, specifically focusing on magazines aimed at women's fashion. A popular assumption established within the UK is that the 'perfect' woman is stereotypically a slender, size 8-10 woman with a seemingly perfect complexion, however this stereotype is considered a false misrepresentation. This stereo-typification is supported by the images used in magazines such as Vogue and Look, however both magazines differ in how their women are represented through media texts such as adverts, written articles and interviews. I will be using the theories and work developed by theorists such as Laura Mulvey and the 'Male Gaze', Jacques Lacan, Karen Coats and John Fiske, and talking about why and how women are represented in such a way that many consider to dehumanise them.
Flicking through the latest edition of both Vogue and Look magazines, I have found than an astonishing amount of advertisements contain female models no larger than a clothes size 6. 132 in Vogue compared to a mere 37 advertisements in Look contained female models of this size. I also found there to be approximately 8 size 8 models in Vogue, in comparison to 23 in Look. Taking into consideration that Vogue contains more than four times the amount of pages than look does, and contains more advertisements as a whole (rather than articles etc.), Vogue is still showing more size 6 models in proportion to it's other advertisements than Look are. Over all, the number of models found in these editions that were found at and larger size than an 8 were astoundingly small. 6 were found in Vogue, and 3 in Look (both of which only showed models no larger than a British clothes size 12). This will no doubt convince the magazine's audience that this is the way that they are meant to look, if naturally sized women are not represented at all in these magazines, then why would women think that it is something to strive for? They wouldn't.
As a principal, Vogue as a magazine contains a larger amount of advertisements rather than articles and stories, in comparison to Look. This is over several editions of both magazines, rather than just the one. Because of this, Vogue's intentions and motives may be seen to differ compared to those of Look Magazine, which contains articles on the latest celebrity relationships, gossip articles and affordable fashion. These sorts of articles tend to gratify the needs of it's audience members by giving them an insight into the latest celebrity news and gossip. By doing this, Look (as a magazine) is in a way advertising the celebrity as a lifestyle choice, in comparison to Vogue, which I have found to be advertising a specific product, name or brand. Therefore, Vogue is seen to be directly advertising a specific product, whereas Look are advertising a certain style, and showing the audience how to achieve this style through the brands directly advertised in Vogue (or similar products at a much more affordable price).
Friday, 20 September 2013
Skyfall: analysis
Propp's theory of the seven archetypal character identifications becomes extremely apparent in this scene, with the traditional Hero, Villain and Princess identified. As in all Bond films, James Bond can be obviously identified as the hero, and this is due to the Dark suit wore in the scene and the dark sunglasses worn, allowing the audience to obtain a sense of uncertainty and mystery, in comparison to the white suit, white hair and light, faded clothes worn by the typical 'Villain' in this scene. When stood together in the same (long) shot, the comparison between the Hero and the Villain made the identification between the two obvious for the audience. By wearing the white suit, the Villain is presenting himself (or rather being presented by the producers) as an innocent looking man, with white signifying innocence and naivety, characteristics which aren't stereotypically found in men of this character's age, or men at all. Also, by the character's name being unspoken, the audience are lead to watch the events unfold without knowing who he actually is. This however would only take place if the scene was being watched alone rather than with the rest of the film.
This scene support's Propp's theory by enforcing a similar one of Levi Straus, with the Binary Oppositions between, not only the typical hero and the villain, but between the good (hero) and the bad (villain), the good-looking and not so good-looking and the black suit and the white suit, all of which contribute to the audience's decision as to who may be who. Although traditionally the 'Princess' would survive such a scene, being saved by the hero and living happily ever after, both the 'hero' Bond and the audience watch her die, giving a more modern (and less traditional) twist to the scene.
During the clip, as Bond is preparing to shoot the shot glass from the 'princess'' head, she is shown to the audience via long shot, as the camera slowly zooms in on her, keeping her whole body in focus. By not cutting to her face or another part of the body. the audience are left to look in detail at how she has been tied up, her appearance( for example her hair being a tangled mess, her red dress (which may also signify something about her as a person, left for the audience to determine) which is damaged and the blood on her face. The shot flips back to bond as he struggles to shoot, his hand shaking, and again back to the woman, no zoomed in closer to her face using a mid shot, to intensify the moment where she looks at Bond in a desperate attempt to save herself. Each shot gets closer and closer to the woman's face, creating a tense moment for the audience, as they decide whether Bond will shoot or not.
This scene support's Propp's theory by enforcing a similar one of Levi Straus, with the Binary Oppositions between, not only the typical hero and the villain, but between the good (hero) and the bad (villain), the good-looking and not so good-looking and the black suit and the white suit, all of which contribute to the audience's decision as to who may be who. Although traditionally the 'Princess' would survive such a scene, being saved by the hero and living happily ever after, both the 'hero' Bond and the audience watch her die, giving a more modern (and less traditional) twist to the scene.
During the clip, as Bond is preparing to shoot the shot glass from the 'princess'' head, she is shown to the audience via long shot, as the camera slowly zooms in on her, keeping her whole body in focus. By not cutting to her face or another part of the body. the audience are left to look in detail at how she has been tied up, her appearance( for example her hair being a tangled mess, her red dress (which may also signify something about her as a person, left for the audience to determine) which is damaged and the blood on her face. The shot flips back to bond as he struggles to shoot, his hand shaking, and again back to the woman, no zoomed in closer to her face using a mid shot, to intensify the moment where she looks at Bond in a desperate attempt to save herself. Each shot gets closer and closer to the woman's face, creating a tense moment for the audience, as they decide whether Bond will shoot or not.
There are several aspects within this short clip which enforces the typical genre, for example, the suit worn by the Hero, the weaponry (for example the guns in the case, used by the Hero and the Villain) and the help which arrives for Bond (for example the Choppers and other forms of aircraft which arrive at the same time as the traditional, repeated signature 'Bond music' known as iconic by the public comes into play). A traditional fight scene is also apparent within the scene, all of which are shot extremely low to the ground, which also encourages the idea that the film is that of a traditional spy/action genre. By supporting this typical genre, the producers are gratifying the audience's expectations in that the will know what sort of scenes would typically follow in a genre such as this.
The music used when the characters enter the set and the scene begins, may signify that of a war (either physical or metaphorical), however also shows the audience a clam scene, at a steady pace as the characters emerge. The non-diegetic sounds soon turn to fast pace (more likely to be associated with such a film), indicating to the audience that a scene iconic to the James Bond films will be unveiling. While the fight scene continues, the audience are allowed to view Bond's triumph's through several mid shots extremely low to the ground as he tackles what may be considered by the audience 'villains' as all of the connotations associated with a Bond film are now present.
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
Describe Niche and Mainstream audiences with specific text examples
A mainstream text has a wider and less specific target audience than a niche text may do, due to aspects such as the airing time, scheduling, subject content (for example cast members, storyline etc.) and mode of address. A niche text is generally less popular than a mainstream text, and also has the following of a niche audience (in comparison to a mainstream text which is followed by a mass audience).
Now a programme with a mainstream audience following, which was once a niche text, Breaking Bad is aired at a mixture of different times, ranging from 7.57PM through to 4.58AM. In previous years, the earlier series of this text will have been aired into the late hours of the night and early hours of the morning, with less advertising due to the fact that it had a smaller following, and mainstream texts would have held priority in advertisement during the daytime. Throughout it's five series', Breaking Bad's subject content has adapted to gratify the mode of address of it's audience type, due to the fact that the programme was becoming more popular in the US and becoming well known in the UK. THis would have inspired producers to create a more mainstream storyline, including maybe even some of Todorov's theory of the equilibrium, with a disruption and cliffhanger ending each episode to entice the ass audience into watching the programme continuously weekly.
Advertising was once minimal for this media text, therefore the audience access would too have been minimal. This would have created a niche audience in the idea that the not many people would have seen advertising, and there are several reasons for this;
- By being aired on American channels such as AMC, Five* (or 5*) and Netflix (all of which are either advertised in the UK and other countries slightly, or not at all), which proves the programme's popularity in America only. Because of this, the range of audience types will be limited.
- Also, by having the main character turn into someone with non-tradiotional morals and beliefs, the programme will only gratify certain audience members. What started off as a normal, typical American family man, soon turned into someone who most members of the general public wouldn't agree with, making them either dislike the character or become disinterested in the programme, loosing followers and decreasing ratings, creating a niche text.
In comparison to this, British television programmes such as the X-Factor are well known in both Britain and other countries, with America (as one of a few examples) making their own version, 'X Factor US'. The British version of X Factor is also well known in the US, with a past British judge (Simon Cowell) taking the same role on in the US version. As a brand, The X Factor is one of the most mainstream British television programmes (competitions).
In regards to scheduling and placement, both at 8.00 pm on Saturdays and Sundays, this text takes up a large amount of one of the most popular and most-watched times on television. Saturdays and Sundays both lie on weekends, giving people the time to sit down (as a family or with friends) and watch the programme through. Similarly to this, Sundays (considered the 'day of rest') also allow people to do the same thing, and because of this, people are given the weekdays to talk about the programme and it's highlights before it continues on the next Saturday. Also, by using such accessible times, the audience will find that the programme itself becomes more accessible. Being broadcasted on ITV (and having ITV+1 and ITVPlayer to catch up on the episodes that they have missed) allows the audience to keep following the programme continuously throughout the weeks that it is being aired.
With interactive material on the ITV website, audience members can continue watching cuts and extra material form the previous week's episode, until the next week's is aired. In regards to the Mode of Address, the X Factor uses likeable characters (as well as characters which may generally be disliked by the majority of audiences), for example boy groups (appealing to young females), contestants with a heartfelt story (appealing to the family types) and so on. The subject content of this text is light, easy watching, however with the competitive streak of this type of programme, the audience can choose their favourite contestants and follow and support them, creating a mode of address, and keeping the ratings as high as possible, generating more profit.
Now a programme with a mainstream audience following, which was once a niche text, Breaking Bad is aired at a mixture of different times, ranging from 7.57PM through to 4.58AM. In previous years, the earlier series of this text will have been aired into the late hours of the night and early hours of the morning, with less advertising due to the fact that it had a smaller following, and mainstream texts would have held priority in advertisement during the daytime. Throughout it's five series', Breaking Bad's subject content has adapted to gratify the mode of address of it's audience type, due to the fact that the programme was becoming more popular in the US and becoming well known in the UK. THis would have inspired producers to create a more mainstream storyline, including maybe even some of Todorov's theory of the equilibrium, with a disruption and cliffhanger ending each episode to entice the ass audience into watching the programme continuously weekly.
Advertising was once minimal for this media text, therefore the audience access would too have been minimal. This would have created a niche audience in the idea that the not many people would have seen advertising, and there are several reasons for this;
- By being aired on American channels such as AMC, Five* (or 5*) and Netflix (all of which are either advertised in the UK and other countries slightly, or not at all), which proves the programme's popularity in America only. Because of this, the range of audience types will be limited.
- Also, by having the main character turn into someone with non-tradiotional morals and beliefs, the programme will only gratify certain audience members. What started off as a normal, typical American family man, soon turned into someone who most members of the general public wouldn't agree with, making them either dislike the character or become disinterested in the programme, loosing followers and decreasing ratings, creating a niche text.
In comparison to this, British television programmes such as the X-Factor are well known in both Britain and other countries, with America (as one of a few examples) making their own version, 'X Factor US'. The British version of X Factor is also well known in the US, with a past British judge (Simon Cowell) taking the same role on in the US version. As a brand, The X Factor is one of the most mainstream British television programmes (competitions).
In regards to scheduling and placement, both at 8.00 pm on Saturdays and Sundays, this text takes up a large amount of one of the most popular and most-watched times on television. Saturdays and Sundays both lie on weekends, giving people the time to sit down (as a family or with friends) and watch the programme through. Similarly to this, Sundays (considered the 'day of rest') also allow people to do the same thing, and because of this, people are given the weekdays to talk about the programme and it's highlights before it continues on the next Saturday. Also, by using such accessible times, the audience will find that the programme itself becomes more accessible. Being broadcasted on ITV (and having ITV+1 and ITVPlayer to catch up on the episodes that they have missed) allows the audience to keep following the programme continuously throughout the weeks that it is being aired.
With interactive material on the ITV website, audience members can continue watching cuts and extra material form the previous week's episode, until the next week's is aired. In regards to the Mode of Address, the X Factor uses likeable characters (as well as characters which may generally be disliked by the majority of audiences), for example boy groups (appealing to young females), contestants with a heartfelt story (appealing to the family types) and so on. The subject content of this text is light, easy watching, however with the competitive streak of this type of programme, the audience can choose their favourite contestants and follow and support them, creating a mode of address, and keeping the ratings as high as possible, generating more profit.
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