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Violent women in cinema pose an exciting challenge to spectators,
overturning ideas of 'typical' feminine subjectivity. This book
explores the representation of homicidal women in contemporary art
and independent cinema. Examining narrative, style and
spectatorship, Loreck investigates the power of art cinema to
depict transgressive femininity.
Screening Scarlett Johansson: Gender, Genre, Stardom provides an
account of Johansson's persona, work and stardom, extending from
her breakout roles in independent cinema, to contemporary
blockbusters, to her self-parodying work in science-fiction.
Screening Scarlett Johansson is more than an account of Johansson's
career; it positions Johansson as a point of reference for
interrogating how femininity, sexuality, identity and genre play
out through a contemporary woman star and the textual manipulations
of her image. The chapters in this collection cast a critical eye
over the characters Johansson has portrayed, the personas she has
inhabited, and how the two intersect and influence one another.
They draw out the multitude of meanings generated through and
inherent to her performances, specifically looking at processes of
transformation, metamorphosis and self-deconstruction depicted in
her work.
Critics regularly use the term "provocateur" to describe
controversial film directors. Although most individuals who attract
this term are men, there is a long and largely unexamined history
of female auteurs who shock and unsettle their viewers. Provocation
in Women's Filmmaking: Authorship and Art Cinema investigates how
women directors participate in the tradition of provocative art
cinema. Focusing on the post-millennium films of auteurs such as
Lisa Aschan, Catherine Breillat, Jennifer Kent, Isabella Ekloef,
Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Claire Denis, Anna Biller and Athina Rachel
Tsangari, this book considers the aesthetics and strategies of
women's provocative filmmaking in contemporary cinema. Challenging
the gendering of provocation as a hyper-masculine mode of
authorship, the book uncovers an enticing and complex array of
divisive works by women.
Screening Scarlett Johansson: Gender, Genre, Stardom provides an
account of Johansson's persona, work and stardom, extending from
her breakout roles in independent cinema, to contemporary
blockbusters, to her self-parodying work in science-fiction.
Screening Scarlett Johansson is more than an account of Johansson's
career; it positions Johansson as a point of reference for
interrogating how femininity, sexuality, identity and genre play
out through a contemporary woman star and the textual manipulations
of her image. The chapters in this collection cast a critical eye
over the characters Johansson has portrayed, the personas she has
inhabited, and how the two intersect and influence one another.
They draw out the multitude of meanings generated through and
inherent to her performances, specifically looking at processes of
transformation, metamorphosis and self-deconstruction depicted in
her work.
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