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  2. Male gaze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male_gaze

    In Laura Mulvey's 1975 essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema", [12] [16] [17] she presents, explains, and develops the cinematic concept of the male gaze. 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 ...

  3. Laura Mulvey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Mulvey

    Regarding Mulvey's view of the identity of the gaze, some authors questioned "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" on the matter of whether the gaze is really always male. Mulvey does not acknowledge a protagonist and a spectator other than a heterosexual male, failing to consider a woman or homosexual as the gaze. [ 13 ]

  4. Oppositional gaze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oppositional_gaze

    The oppositional gaze is direct rejection of Laura Mulvey's Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema (1975). [1] Mulvey's text analyses Lacan's mirror stage within film, concluding that subjectivity is "the birth of the long love affair/ despair between image and self-image which has found such intensity of expression in film and such joyous recognition in the cinema audience". [3]

  5. Ways of Seeing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ways_of_Seeing

    The series has had a lasting influence, and in particular introduced the concept of the male gaze, as part of his analysis of the treatment of the nude in European painting. It soon became popular among feminists , including the British film critic Laura Mulvey , who used it to critique traditional media representations of the female character ...

  6. Gaze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaze

    The term "female gaze" was created as a response to the proposed concept of the male gaze as coined by Laura Mulvey. In particular, it is a rebellion against the viewership censored to an only masculine lens and feminine desire regardless of the viewer's gender identity or sexual orientation. [13] In essence, the forced desire of femininity ...

  7. Pamela Anderson Admits She 'Didn’t Realize' How Being ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pamela-anderson-admits-she-didn...

    In an interview with Variety published Wednesday, Anderson’s son Brandon gushed about his mom’s “great shift” in her career from being “objectified” by the “male gaze” to gaining ...

  8. Riddles of the Sphinx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riddles_of_the_Sphinx

    In her writing on feminist film theory, Mulvey has argued that, if the dominant cinema produces pleasure through scopophilia which favours the male gaze and festishization of woman as object, then alternative versions of cinema need to construct different forms of pleasure based on psychic relations that adopt a feminist perspective. [4]

  9. Review: 'Pleasure' interrogates the male gaze through a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/review-pleasure-interrogates...

    The drama 'Pleasure,' directed by Ninja Thyberg, is a daring dive into L.A.'s adult film industry.