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Representation
Gender/Sexuality/Race/Sub-cultures
Gender: Judith Butler
   In her most influential book Gender Trouble (1990), Butler argued
    that feminism had made a mistake by trying to assert that 'women'
    were a group with common characteristics and interests.
   Butler notes that feminists rejected the idea that biology is destiny,
    but then developed an account of patriarchal culture which
    assumed that masculine and feminine genders would inevitably be
    built, by culture, upon 'male' and 'female' bodies, making the same
    destiny just as inescapable. That argument allows no room for
    choice, difference or resistance.
   The very fact that women and men can say that they feel more or
    less 'like a woman' or 'like a man' shows, Butler points out, that 'the
    experience of a gendered... cultural identity is considered an
    achievement.'
   Butler argues that sex (male, female) is seen to cause gender
    (masculine, feminine) which is seen to cause desire (towards the
    other gender). This is seen as a kind of continuum. Butler's approach
    -- inspired in part by Foucault -- is basically to smash the supposed
    links between these, so that gender and desire are flexible, free-
    floating and not 'caused' by other stable factors.
Gender: Judith Butler

Butler argues that we all     Butler says: 'There is no gender identity behind
put on a gender               the expressions of gender; ... identity is
performance, whether          performatively constituted by the very
traditional or not, anyway,   "expressions" that are said to be its results.'
and so it is not a question   (Gender Trouble, p. 25). In other words, gender
of whether to do a gender     is a performance; it's what you do at particular
performance, but what         times, rather than a universal who you are.
form that performance will
take. By choosing to be
different about it, we
might work to change
gender norms and the
binary understanding of
masculinity and femininity.
Gender: Angela McRobbie
ANGELA MCROBBIE BELIEVES THAT CULTURAL FEMALE
  EXPRESSION IS A SYMBOLIC REVOLT AGAINST THE
          CONSTRAINTS ON GIRL’S LIVES
McRobbie puts distance between herself and those feminist writers who denounce
women's magazines outright. Whilst some of their content may be disappointing to
feminist readers, McRobbie notes, many of the messages are positive and
empowering to young women.
"The idea that sexual pleasure is learnt, not automatically discovered with the right partner, the
importance of being able to identify and articulate what you want sexually and what you do not
want, the importance of learning about the body and being able to make the right decisions
about abortion and contraception, the different ways of getting pleasure and so on, each one of
these figured high in the early feminist agenda. This was the sort of material found in books like
Our Bodies, Our Selves (Boston Women's Health Collective 1973), the volume which started as a
feminist handbook and went on to sell millions of copies across the world.”
- McRobbie

Post Feminism & Beyond Lecture by Angela McRobbie:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wk-QIXlx2wk&feature=player_embedded
Gender: Laura Mulvey
   The theory of the ‘Male Gaze’ has a very simple idea behind it.
    Mulvey believes that male audiences get a sense of power and
    pleasure from watching women in the media who are often
    represented as objects for male pleasure. This type of objectified
    woman is the media norm. Most media representations of
    women are mainly for men – for the male gaze.


   Mulvey’s theory argues that in nearly all media representations of
    women, the viewer is put in the masculine subject position, with
    the figure of the woman on screen as the object of desire.
    Viewers are encouraged to identify with the hero of the film, who
    is usually a man. Meanwhile, female characters are, according to
    Mulvey, there just to be looked at. In this way, the camera is like
    the eyes of a man, so we as the audience watch the images
    through the male gaze.


   Most media representations present men as active and in control
    and treat women as passive objects of desire… Women are not
    allowed to be desiring sexual subjects in their own right. Such
    texts objectify women in relation to ‘the controlling male gaze’,
    presenting ‘woman as image’ (or ‘spectacle’) and man as ‘bearer of
    the look’. Men do the looking; women are there to be looked at.
Gender: Laura Mulvey
   According to Mulvey, this is a patriarchal society. This means that it recognizes
    the male gender and the sexuality of men as the dominant norm. The media
    offers a system of representation based on the male pleasure of ‘looking’ – an
    erotic realm using the language and images of the patriarchal culture. It satisfies
    and reinforces the masculine ego and represses the desires of women.
   Laura Mulvey’s theory of the ‘male gaze’ is
    important; she contends that scopophilia (the
    basic human sexual drive to look at other
    human beings) has been ‘organised’ by
    society’s patriarchal definition of looking as a
    male activity, and being looked at as a female
    ‘passivity’. Male power means that any social
    representation of women is constructed either
    as a fetishised spectacle or as a spectacle for
    the purpose of male voyeuristic pleasure.
Sexuality: Queer Theory
Queer Theory
“Queer is by definition whatever is at odds with the normal, the legitimate, the
dominant. There is nothing in particular to which it necessarily refers. It is an identity
without an essence. 'Queer' then, demarcates not a positivity but a positionality vis-
à-vis the normative.”
Queer theory is derived largely from post-structuralist theory, and
deconstruction in particular. Starting in the 1970s, a range of authors brought deconstructio
"straight" ideology. Queer theorists challenged the validity and consistency of heteronorma
The term "queer theory" was introduced in 1990, with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,
Judith Butler, Adrienne Rich and Diana Fuss
Sexuality: Queer Theory
“…a rough summary of Queer Theory is that we
should not be defined by which sexual acts we
perform, just like our gender is not defined by
the things we do. According to Queer Theory,
the current labels we have for people don’t
                                                      angelawd.wo
work. That’s especially important because we          rdpress.com
have only one label for sexual behavior between
opposite sexes – heterosexual, while there are
lots of labels for non-heterosexuals: gay, lesbian,
trans-gender, queer, bisexual.”
Sexuality: Feminist Theory

Feminist theory is the extension of feminism into theoretical or philosophical discourse. It aims to
understand the nature of gender inequality. It examines women's social roles, experience, and
feminist politics in a variety of fields, such as anthropology and sociology, communication,
psychoanalysis, economics, literary, education, and philosophy.[1] While generally providing a
critique of social relations, much of feminist theory also focuses on analyzing gender inequality and
the promotion of women's rights, interests, and issues.


Feminists have taken many different approaches to the analysis of cinema. These include discussions of the
function of women characters in particular film narratives or in particular genres, such as film noir, where a
female character can often be seen to embody a subversive sexuality that is dangerous to males and is ultimately
punished with death. In considering the way that films are put together, many feminist film critics, such as Laura
Mulvey, have pointed to the "male gaze" that predominates in classical Hollywood film making. Through the use
of various film techniques, such as shot reverse shot, the viewer is led to align themself with the point of view of
a male protagonist. Notably, women function as objects of this gaze far more often than as proxies for the
spectator. Feminist film theory of the last twenty years is heavily influenced by the general transformation in the
field of aesthetics, including the new options of articulating the gaze, offered by psychoanalytical French
feminism.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2987BtXC-U
Race: Stuart Hall
   Hall's work covers issues of hegemony and cultural studies, taking a post-Gramscian stance. He
    regards language-use as operating within a framework of power, institutions and
    politics/economics. This view presents people as producers and consumers of culture at the same
    time.
   culture is not something to simply appreciate or study, but a "critical site of social action and
    intervention, where power relations are both established and potentially unsettled.”
   Hall has become one of the main proponents of reception theory, and developed Hall's Theory of
    encoding and decoding. This approach to textual analysis focuses on the scope for negotiation and
    opposition on part of the audience. This means that the audience does not simply passively accept
    a text — social control. Crime statistics, in Hall's view, are often manipulated for political and
    economic purposes. Moral panics (e.g. over mugging) could thereby be ignited in order to create
    public support for the need to "police the crisis." The media play a central role in the "social
    production of news" in order to reap the rewards of lurid crime stories.
   His works — such as studies showing the link between racial prejudice and media-have a
    reputation as influential. They serve as an important foundational text for contemporary cultural
    studies.
   Hall believes identity to be affected by history and culture, rather than a finished product, he sees
    it as ongoing production
   Hall has also widely discussed notions of: cultural identity & race and ethnicity
Race: Stuart Hall
Hall's paper 'Encoding/decoding' published in 1973 had a major influence on cultural
studies, and many of the terms it set forth remain influential in the field.The essay
takes up and challenges longheld assumptions on how media messages are
produced, circulated and consumed, proposing a new theory of communication.
Hall's essay challenged all three components of the mass communications model. It
argued that:
(i) meaning is not simply fixed or determined by the sender
(ii) the message is never transparent
(iii) the audience is not a passive recipient of meaning
Race: Edward Said
 Orientalism by       Said explained that at the start of European colonization
Edward Said is a       the Europeans came in contact with the lesser
text of cultural       developed countries of the east. They found their
 studies which         civilization and culture very interesting and established
 challenges the        the science of orientalism (the study of the
   concept of          orientals/people from these exotic civilization).
 orientalism or       Said argues Europeans divided the world into two parts;
 the difference        the east and the west or the civilized and the uncivilized-
 between east          an artificial boundary
    and west.         The Europeans used orientalism to define themselves.
                       Some particular attributes were associated with the
                       orientals, and whatever the orientals weren’t the
                       occidents were. The Europeans defined themselves as
                       the superior race compared to the orientals; and they
                       justified their colonization by this concept. They said that
                       it was their duty towards the world to civilize the
                       uncivilized world.
Race: Edward Said
   The main problem, however, arose when the
    Europeans started generalizing the attributes they
    associated with orientals, and started portraying these
    artificial characteristics associated with orientals in
    their western world through their scientific reports,
    literary work, and other media sources.
    What happened was that it created a certain image
    about the orientals in the European mind and in doing
    that infused a bias in the European attitude towards
    the orientals. This prejudice was also found in the
    orientalists (scientist studying the orientals); and all
    their scientific research and reports were under the
    influence of this. The generalized attributes associated
    with the orientals can be seen even today, for
    example, the Arabs are defined as uncivilized people;
    and Islam is seen as religion of the terrorist.
Sub-cultures and youth: Dick
Hebdidge
                  'Hebdige's Subculture: The Meaning of Style is so important:
                  complex and remarkably lucid, it's the first book dealing with
                  punk to offer intellectual content. Hebdige [...] is concerned with
                  the UK's postwar, music-centered, white working-class
                  subcultures, from teddy boys to mods and rockers to skinheads
                  and punks.’-Rolling Stone


Dick Hebdige argued that a subculture is a subversion to normalcy. He wrote that
subcultures can be perceived as negative due to their nature of criticism to the
dominant societal standard. Hebdige argued that subcultures bring together like-
minded individuals who feel neglected by societal standards and allow them to
develop a sense of identity.
Sub-cultures and youth: Ken Gelder
In 2007, Ken Gelder proposed to distinguish subcultures from
countercultures based on the level of immersion in society. Gelder
further proposed six key ways in which subcultures can be
identified:
ii.through their often negative relations to work (as 'idle', 'parasitic',
at play or at leisure, etc.);
iii.through their negative or ambivalent relation to class (since
subcultures are not 'class-conscious' and don't conform to
traditional class definitions);
iv.through their association with territory (the 'street', the 'hood',
the club, etc.), rather than property;
v.through their movement out of the home and into non-domestic
forms of belonging (i.e. social groups other than the family);
vi.through their stylistic ties to excess and exaggeration (with some
exceptions);
vii.through their refusal of the banalities of ordinary life and
massification

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Media representation presentation

  • 2.
  • 3. Gender: Judith Butler  In her most influential book Gender Trouble (1990), Butler argued that feminism had made a mistake by trying to assert that 'women' were a group with common characteristics and interests.  Butler notes that feminists rejected the idea that biology is destiny, but then developed an account of patriarchal culture which assumed that masculine and feminine genders would inevitably be built, by culture, upon 'male' and 'female' bodies, making the same destiny just as inescapable. That argument allows no room for choice, difference or resistance.  The very fact that women and men can say that they feel more or less 'like a woman' or 'like a man' shows, Butler points out, that 'the experience of a gendered... cultural identity is considered an achievement.'  Butler argues that sex (male, female) is seen to cause gender (masculine, feminine) which is seen to cause desire (towards the other gender). This is seen as a kind of continuum. Butler's approach -- inspired in part by Foucault -- is basically to smash the supposed links between these, so that gender and desire are flexible, free- floating and not 'caused' by other stable factors.
  • 4. Gender: Judith Butler Butler argues that we all Butler says: 'There is no gender identity behind put on a gender the expressions of gender; ... identity is performance, whether performatively constituted by the very traditional or not, anyway, "expressions" that are said to be its results.' and so it is not a question (Gender Trouble, p. 25). In other words, gender of whether to do a gender is a performance; it's what you do at particular performance, but what times, rather than a universal who you are. form that performance will take. By choosing to be different about it, we might work to change gender norms and the binary understanding of masculinity and femininity.
  • 5. Gender: Angela McRobbie ANGELA MCROBBIE BELIEVES THAT CULTURAL FEMALE EXPRESSION IS A SYMBOLIC REVOLT AGAINST THE CONSTRAINTS ON GIRL’S LIVES McRobbie puts distance between herself and those feminist writers who denounce women's magazines outright. Whilst some of their content may be disappointing to feminist readers, McRobbie notes, many of the messages are positive and empowering to young women. "The idea that sexual pleasure is learnt, not automatically discovered with the right partner, the importance of being able to identify and articulate what you want sexually and what you do not want, the importance of learning about the body and being able to make the right decisions about abortion and contraception, the different ways of getting pleasure and so on, each one of these figured high in the early feminist agenda. This was the sort of material found in books like Our Bodies, Our Selves (Boston Women's Health Collective 1973), the volume which started as a feminist handbook and went on to sell millions of copies across the world.” - McRobbie Post Feminism & Beyond Lecture by Angela McRobbie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wk-QIXlx2wk&feature=player_embedded
  • 6. Gender: Laura Mulvey  The theory of the ‘Male Gaze’ has a very simple idea behind it. Mulvey believes that male audiences get a sense of power and pleasure from watching women in the media who are often represented as objects for male pleasure. This type of objectified woman is the media norm. Most media representations of women are mainly for men – for the male gaze.  Mulvey’s theory argues that in nearly all media representations of women, the viewer is put in the masculine subject position, with the figure of the woman on screen as the object of desire. Viewers are encouraged to identify with the hero of the film, who is usually a man. Meanwhile, female characters are, according to Mulvey, there just to be looked at. In this way, the camera is like the eyes of a man, so we as the audience watch the images through the male gaze.  Most media representations present men as active and in control and treat women as passive objects of desire… Women are not allowed to be desiring sexual subjects in their own right. Such texts objectify women in relation to ‘the controlling male gaze’, presenting ‘woman as image’ (or ‘spectacle’) and man as ‘bearer of the look’. Men do the looking; women are there to be looked at.
  • 7. Gender: Laura Mulvey  According to Mulvey, this is a patriarchal society. This means that it recognizes the male gender and the sexuality of men as the dominant norm. The media offers a system of representation based on the male pleasure of ‘looking’ – an erotic realm using the language and images of the patriarchal culture. It satisfies and reinforces the masculine ego and represses the desires of women.  Laura Mulvey’s theory of the ‘male gaze’ is important; she contends that scopophilia (the basic human sexual drive to look at other human beings) has been ‘organised’ by society’s patriarchal definition of looking as a male activity, and being looked at as a female ‘passivity’. Male power means that any social representation of women is constructed either as a fetishised spectacle or as a spectacle for the purpose of male voyeuristic pleasure.
  • 8. Sexuality: Queer Theory Queer Theory “Queer is by definition whatever is at odds with the normal, the legitimate, the dominant. There is nothing in particular to which it necessarily refers. It is an identity without an essence. 'Queer' then, demarcates not a positivity but a positionality vis- à-vis the normative.” Queer theory is derived largely from post-structuralist theory, and deconstruction in particular. Starting in the 1970s, a range of authors brought deconstructio "straight" ideology. Queer theorists challenged the validity and consistency of heteronorma The term "queer theory" was introduced in 1990, with Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Judith Butler, Adrienne Rich and Diana Fuss
  • 9. Sexuality: Queer Theory “…a rough summary of Queer Theory is that we should not be defined by which sexual acts we perform, just like our gender is not defined by the things we do. According to Queer Theory, the current labels we have for people don’t angelawd.wo work. That’s especially important because we rdpress.com have only one label for sexual behavior between opposite sexes – heterosexual, while there are lots of labels for non-heterosexuals: gay, lesbian, trans-gender, queer, bisexual.”
  • 10. Sexuality: Feminist Theory Feminist theory is the extension of feminism into theoretical or philosophical discourse. It aims to understand the nature of gender inequality. It examines women's social roles, experience, and feminist politics in a variety of fields, such as anthropology and sociology, communication, psychoanalysis, economics, literary, education, and philosophy.[1] While generally providing a critique of social relations, much of feminist theory also focuses on analyzing gender inequality and the promotion of women's rights, interests, and issues. Feminists have taken many different approaches to the analysis of cinema. These include discussions of the function of women characters in particular film narratives or in particular genres, such as film noir, where a female character can often be seen to embody a subversive sexuality that is dangerous to males and is ultimately punished with death. In considering the way that films are put together, many feminist film critics, such as Laura Mulvey, have pointed to the "male gaze" that predominates in classical Hollywood film making. Through the use of various film techniques, such as shot reverse shot, the viewer is led to align themself with the point of view of a male protagonist. Notably, women function as objects of this gaze far more often than as proxies for the spectator. Feminist film theory of the last twenty years is heavily influenced by the general transformation in the field of aesthetics, including the new options of articulating the gaze, offered by psychoanalytical French feminism. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2987BtXC-U
  • 11. Race: Stuart Hall  Hall's work covers issues of hegemony and cultural studies, taking a post-Gramscian stance. He regards language-use as operating within a framework of power, institutions and politics/economics. This view presents people as producers and consumers of culture at the same time.  culture is not something to simply appreciate or study, but a "critical site of social action and intervention, where power relations are both established and potentially unsettled.”  Hall has become one of the main proponents of reception theory, and developed Hall's Theory of encoding and decoding. This approach to textual analysis focuses on the scope for negotiation and opposition on part of the audience. This means that the audience does not simply passively accept a text — social control. Crime statistics, in Hall's view, are often manipulated for political and economic purposes. Moral panics (e.g. over mugging) could thereby be ignited in order to create public support for the need to "police the crisis." The media play a central role in the "social production of news" in order to reap the rewards of lurid crime stories.  His works — such as studies showing the link between racial prejudice and media-have a reputation as influential. They serve as an important foundational text for contemporary cultural studies.  Hall believes identity to be affected by history and culture, rather than a finished product, he sees it as ongoing production  Hall has also widely discussed notions of: cultural identity & race and ethnicity
  • 12. Race: Stuart Hall Hall's paper 'Encoding/decoding' published in 1973 had a major influence on cultural studies, and many of the terms it set forth remain influential in the field.The essay takes up and challenges longheld assumptions on how media messages are produced, circulated and consumed, proposing a new theory of communication. Hall's essay challenged all three components of the mass communications model. It argued that: (i) meaning is not simply fixed or determined by the sender (ii) the message is never transparent (iii) the audience is not a passive recipient of meaning
  • 13. Race: Edward Said Orientalism by  Said explained that at the start of European colonization Edward Said is a the Europeans came in contact with the lesser text of cultural developed countries of the east. They found their studies which civilization and culture very interesting and established challenges the the science of orientalism (the study of the concept of orientals/people from these exotic civilization). orientalism or  Said argues Europeans divided the world into two parts; the difference the east and the west or the civilized and the uncivilized- between east an artificial boundary and west.  The Europeans used orientalism to define themselves. Some particular attributes were associated with the orientals, and whatever the orientals weren’t the occidents were. The Europeans defined themselves as the superior race compared to the orientals; and they justified their colonization by this concept. They said that it was their duty towards the world to civilize the uncivilized world.
  • 14. Race: Edward Said  The main problem, however, arose when the Europeans started generalizing the attributes they associated with orientals, and started portraying these artificial characteristics associated with orientals in their western world through their scientific reports, literary work, and other media sources.  What happened was that it created a certain image about the orientals in the European mind and in doing that infused a bias in the European attitude towards the orientals. This prejudice was also found in the orientalists (scientist studying the orientals); and all their scientific research and reports were under the influence of this. The generalized attributes associated with the orientals can be seen even today, for example, the Arabs are defined as uncivilized people; and Islam is seen as religion of the terrorist.
  • 15. Sub-cultures and youth: Dick Hebdidge 'Hebdige's Subculture: The Meaning of Style is so important: complex and remarkably lucid, it's the first book dealing with punk to offer intellectual content. Hebdige [...] is concerned with the UK's postwar, music-centered, white working-class subcultures, from teddy boys to mods and rockers to skinheads and punks.’-Rolling Stone Dick Hebdige argued that a subculture is a subversion to normalcy. He wrote that subcultures can be perceived as negative due to their nature of criticism to the dominant societal standard. Hebdige argued that subcultures bring together like- minded individuals who feel neglected by societal standards and allow them to develop a sense of identity.
  • 16. Sub-cultures and youth: Ken Gelder In 2007, Ken Gelder proposed to distinguish subcultures from countercultures based on the level of immersion in society. Gelder further proposed six key ways in which subcultures can be identified: ii.through their often negative relations to work (as 'idle', 'parasitic', at play or at leisure, etc.); iii.through their negative or ambivalent relation to class (since subcultures are not 'class-conscious' and don't conform to traditional class definitions); iv.through their association with territory (the 'street', the 'hood', the club, etc.), rather than property; v.through their movement out of the home and into non-domestic forms of belonging (i.e. social groups other than the family); vi.through their stylistic ties to excess and exaggeration (with some exceptions); vii.through their refusal of the banalities of ordinary life and massification