Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Individual actors & performers
|
Buy Now
The Sex Goddess in American Film, 1930-1965 - Jean Harlow, Mae West, Lana Turner, and Jayne Mansfield (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,586
Discovery Miles 25 860
|
|
The Sex Goddess in American Film, 1930-1965 - Jean Harlow, Mae West, Lana Turner, and Jayne Mansfield (Hardcover, New)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
The sex goddess's seemingly endless power to influence and
fascinate, to achieve in a sense her own self-reproduction through
many decades of "re-makeovers" reveals her positioning in American
culture as not only a lasting image but also as a potentially
powerful and subversive force. The sex goddess is often thought by
feminist film theorists to be little more than a projection of the
male imaginary. However, this book makes a necessary correction to
this trend by demonstrating how the actresses performing the role
of sex goddess in fact use the feminine imaginary to create their
own agency. Through their performance of "hyper" femininity, and
with their seductive power, they exert control not only over their
filmic narrative "targets of seduction" but their viewers as well.
The ability to hold their objects of seduction in such thrall
suggests that the image of the sex goddess possesses a power far
more subversive than what has been previously explored; in fact, to
date there has not yet been a critical study of the sex goddess in
film. Cinema becomes a place where the sex goddess's designation as
sex itself can further suggest her bodily signification as a whole
discourse on sex outside of her cinematic representation, thus
loading her body to be read almost entirely in terms of sex and its
corresponding contemporary social thought. During the period of
Classical Hollywood Cinema, the construct of the sex goddess
warrants especial attention because of what this study can reveal
in broad terms about cultural ideas of feminine sexuality, American
cinema, and visual culture. In the first critical study of the sex
goddess in film, Jessica Hope Jordan illustrates how Jean Harlow
uses her sexualized body to "affect" and seduce viewers away from
any primary identification with those characters and their
plotlines that are supposed to lead the film, to identifying
instead with the kind of sexual empowerment and self-possession her
characters consistently display. Linking the idea of sexual
empowerment to the filmic and public celebration of hyper-feminine
sexuality, the book additionally covers previous feminist
discussions of Mae West's performances as "feminist camp" to argue
that West sought to both celebrate and embody for women viewers
what she viewed as cultural ideals of femininity and women's
sexuality. With Lana Turner and the "cinematic code," the book
considers the many problems inherent in both the filmic and public
celebration of hyper-feminine sexuality in relation to censorship
and considers the effects of the Hays Code on hyper-feminine
sexuality as depicted in film noir. The book also importantly
presents the first critical discussion of the actress Jayne
Mansfield, suggesting that her 1950s open acceptance, celebration,
and public promotion of her feminine sexuality, both onscreen and
off, makes her not only a precursor of the more sexually liberated
60s, but also, like the other actresses discussed here, a kind of
prescient performance artist, even theorist, of feminine sexuality
in particular, and cultural ideas about sexuality more generally.
Beyond recouping her image as feminist, the book demonstrates how
the kind of desire aroused by the sex goddess, a desire which
remains endlessly suspended, works as a supreme example of the
aesthetic apparatus of cinema itself. This is an important book for
inclusion in all film, film history, film theory, gender and
sexuality studies, women's studies, and American studies
collections.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
|