Episode 3 - Television? More like Male-vision

23 de feb. de 2021 · 35m 12s
Episode 3 - Television? More like Male-vision
Descripción

Anuja Pradhan and Alev Kuruoglu talk about gender and representation issues in TV production - and in the writer's rooms. Shows like The Queen’s Gambit and Indian Matchmaking are put...

mostra más
Anuja Pradhan and Alev Kuruoglu talk about gender and representation issues in TV production - and in the writer's rooms. Shows like The Queen’s Gambit and Indian Matchmaking are put under the microscope. Consumer sociologist Carly Drake joins along the way.

Notes and reading tips:

“The Male Gaze”
It was Laura Mulvey who came up with this term, in in the essay “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” (Published in 1975, in the journal Screen - reprinted in the collection “Visual and Other Pleasures” in 1989)

The following are some sources if you would like to better understand engagement with and academic trajectories of this term:

Sassatelli, R. (2011). Interview with Laura Mulvey: Gender, gaze and technology in film culture. Theory, Culture & Society, 28(5), 123-143.

Cooper, B. (2000). “Chick flicks” as feminist texts: The appropriation of the male gaze in Thelma & Louise. Women's Studies in Communication, 23(3), 277-306.

Oliver, K. (2017). The male gaze is more relevant, and more dangerous, than ever. New Review of Film and Television Studies, 15(4), 451-455.

Benson-Allott, C. (2017). On Platforms: No Such Thing Not Yet: Questioning Television's Female Gaze. Film Quarterly, 71(2), 65-71.

Jones, A. (Ed.). (2003). The feminism and visual culture reader. Psychology Press.


Indian Feminist Scholars:

Mohanty, C.T. (1988) Under Western Eyes: Feminist scholarship and colonial discourses. Feminist Review. 30. 61-88.

Mohanty, C.T. (2003) “Under Western Eyes” revisited: Feminist solidarity through anticapitalist struggles. Signs. 28 (2). 499-535.

John, M. (2014) Feminist vocabularies in time and space: Perspectives from India. Economic and Political Weekly. 49(22). 121-130.


Gender and TV:

hooks, b. (2003). The oppositional gaze: Black female spectators. The feminism and visual culture reader, 94-105.

Nygaard, T., Lagerwey, J. (2020) Horrible White People: Gender, genre, and television's precarious whiteness. United States: NYU Press.

Tuncay Zayer, L., Sredl , K., Parmentier,M. & Coleman, C. (2012) Consumption and gender identity in popular media: Discourses of domesticity, authenticity, and sexuality. Consumption Markets & Culture, 15:4, 333-357.

Kandelwal, M. (2009) Arranging Love: Interrogating the vantage point in cross‐border feminism. Signs. 34(3). 583-609.

Cavender, G., Bond-Maupin, L. And Jurik, N. C. (1999) ‘The construction of gender in reality crime TV’, Gender & Society, 13(5), pp. 643–663. doi: 10.1177/089124399013005005.

D'Acci, Julie. 1994. Defining women: Television and the case of “Cagney and Lacey.” Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Green, S. (2019) Fantasy, gender and power in Jessica Jones, Continuum, 33:2, 173-184, DOI: 10.1080/10304312.2019.1569383


General TV:

Fiske, John. 1987. Television culture. New York: Routledge Kegan Paul.
mostra menos
Información
Autor University of Southern Denmark
Organización University of Southern Denmark
Página web -
Etiquetas

Parece que no tienes ningún episodio activo

Echa un ojo al catálogo de Spreaker para descubrir nuevos contenidos.

Actual

Portada del podcast

Parece que no tienes ningún episodio en cola

Echa un ojo al catálogo de Spreaker para descubrir nuevos contenidos.

Siguiente

Portada del episodio Portada del episodio

Cuánto silencio hay aquí...

¡Es hora de descubrir nuevos episodios!

Descubre
Tu librería
Busca