The Sexual Subject; Screen Reader in Sexuality
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
The Sexual Subject brings together writing on sexuality which has appeared in Screen over the past two decades. It reflects the journal's continuing engagement with questions of sexuality and signification in the cinema, an engagement which has had a profound influence on the development of academic study of film and on alternative film and video practice.
The collection opens with Laura Mulvey's classic "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" with its conjunction of semiotics and psychoanalysis, the critical approach which is most closely associated with Screen's rise to international prominence. The Reader then goes on to explore the particular questions and debates which that conjunction provoked: arguments around pornography and the representation of the body; questions of the representation of femininity and masculinity, of the female spectator, and of the social subject.
Many of the writings in The Sexual Subject have become indispensable texts within the study of film. The purpose of the collection is not only to make the articles available to a wider readership, and to a new generation, but also to pose new conjunctions, making connections between debates and inquiries which spanned two crucial decades of film theory.
The Sexual Subject is intended not only for all those with an interest in film and film theory, but for anyone with a commitment to cultural theory, theories of representation, and questions of sexuality and gender.
Contributors: Homi Bhabha, Edward Buscombe, Mary Ann Doane, Richard Dyer, John Ellis, Christine Gledhill, Stephen Heath, Claire Johnston, Annette Kuhn, Alan Lovell, Laura Mulvey, Steve Neale, Claire Pajaczowska, Griselda Pollock, Jackie Stacey, Leslie Stern, Paul Willemen, Christopher Williams, Dugald Williamson.
About the Author
Screen is the leading international journal of film and television theory. Started as an educational journal in the 1960s under the auspices of the Society for Education in Film and Television, it rose to international pre-eminence in the 1970s with its pioneering work on theories of the subject in cinema. With the disbanding of SEFT in 1989, editorship passed to the John Logie Baird Center at the University of Glasgow.
The Sexual Subject; Screen Reader in Sexuality,MANDY MERCK,Routledge,0415074673,Cinema/Film: Book,Film & Video - History & Criticism,Pop Arts / Pop Culture,Sex in motion pictures,Sociology - General,Films, cinema,Gender studies,Sexual behaviour
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