Strike a Pose

IF 0.7 Q3 COMMUNICATION
E. Singer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article traces methods and conventions of performing women’s mental distress before the camera circa 1900. It features an analysis of gestural performances in French, US, Italian, and British films, with special attention given to two pre-1916 Gaumont films that include mad scenes. The topos of the white madwoman presents a valuable lens through which to investigate intermedial relations across performance forms and visual media as early cinema emerged, and gestures signifying madness have been particularly resilient even as approaches to film acting have evolved. Drawing on scholarship from Giorgio Agamben and Rae Beth Gordon, this article questions how techniques of performing female madness intersected with ideologies of race, class, and nationality.
摆个姿势
本文追溯了1900年前后在镜头前表现女性精神痛苦的方法和惯例。它分析了法国、美国、意大利和英国电影中的手势表演,特别关注了1916年前的两部高蒙电影,其中包括疯狂的场景。白人疯女人的主题提供了一个有价值的镜头,通过它可以研究早期电影出现时表演形式和视觉媒体之间的中间关系,即使电影表演的方法已经发展,表示疯狂的手势也特别有弹性。本文借鉴了乔治·阿甘本(Giorgio Agamben)和雷·贝丝·戈登(Rae Beth Gordon)的研究成果,探讨了表演女性疯狂的技巧如何与种族、阶级和国籍的意识形态交织在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Feminist Media Histories
Feminist Media Histories Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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