The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.

Classical Hollywood cinema has always been about creating the impression of realism, thereby enforcing the inseparable linkage between the visual body and its voice (which has to contain dialogue). Moreover, classical Hollywood cinema’s phallocentric nature means that it privileges the phallus as th...

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Main Author: Lee, Hsien Jun.
Other Authors: Brian Keith Bergen-Aurand
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48844
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-488442019-12-10T14:46:52Z The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue. Lee, Hsien Jun. Brian Keith Bergen-Aurand School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities Classical Hollywood cinema has always been about creating the impression of realism, thereby enforcing the inseparable linkage between the visual body and its voice (which has to contain dialogue). Moreover, classical Hollywood cinema’s phallocentric nature means that it privileges the phallus as the “speaking subject… equivalent to [an] unseen enunciator” which predicates the exclusion of female voice based on “an incapacity for looking, speaking, or listening authoritatively, on the one hand, and with what might be called a ‘receptivity’ to the male gaze and voice, on the other” (Silverman 31). In other words, the female voice has to exist as pathology in order for the male voice to be dominant. By relegating the female voice to always requiring a matching female body in the filmic diegesis, classical Hollywood cinema ‘normalizes’ its females so that the males can be superior. Indeed, Michael Grant in his essay “‘Ultimate Formlessness’: Cinema, Horror, and the Limits of Meaning” informs us of Greed’s argument that “the central work of the horror film is the construction of the maternal figure as abject,” and that ultimately “all that is of the Other, is separated out and subordinated to the paternal law” (179) which objectifies females under its phallocentric gaze. In contrast to this trend, I aim to study how the female is glorified and empowered in horror films like Poltergeist (1982) via techniques that subvert synchronized dialogue, thereby allowing my readers to have a broader understanding of how the body-voice boundary in classical Hollywood cinema that pathologizes the female can be destabilized. Bachelor of Arts 2012-05-10T03:20:49Z 2012-05-10T03:20:49Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48844 en Nanyang Technological University 34 p. application/msword
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Lee, Hsien Jun.
The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
description Classical Hollywood cinema has always been about creating the impression of realism, thereby enforcing the inseparable linkage between the visual body and its voice (which has to contain dialogue). Moreover, classical Hollywood cinema’s phallocentric nature means that it privileges the phallus as the “speaking subject… equivalent to [an] unseen enunciator” which predicates the exclusion of female voice based on “an incapacity for looking, speaking, or listening authoritatively, on the one hand, and with what might be called a ‘receptivity’ to the male gaze and voice, on the other” (Silverman 31). In other words, the female voice has to exist as pathology in order for the male voice to be dominant. By relegating the female voice to always requiring a matching female body in the filmic diegesis, classical Hollywood cinema ‘normalizes’ its females so that the males can be superior. Indeed, Michael Grant in his essay “‘Ultimate Formlessness’: Cinema, Horror, and the Limits of Meaning” informs us of Greed’s argument that “the central work of the horror film is the construction of the maternal figure as abject,” and that ultimately “all that is of the Other, is separated out and subordinated to the paternal law” (179) which objectifies females under its phallocentric gaze. In contrast to this trend, I aim to study how the female is glorified and empowered in horror films like Poltergeist (1982) via techniques that subvert synchronized dialogue, thereby allowing my readers to have a broader understanding of how the body-voice boundary in classical Hollywood cinema that pathologizes the female can be destabilized.
author2 Brian Keith Bergen-Aurand
author_facet Brian Keith Bergen-Aurand
Lee, Hsien Jun.
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Hsien Jun.
author_sort Lee, Hsien Jun.
title The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
title_short The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
title_full The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
title_fullStr The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
title_full_unstemmed The feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
title_sort feminist agenda in poltergeist : subverting synchronized dialogue.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48844
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