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Echo and Narcissus
A01=Amy Lawrence
Author_Amy Lawrence
authorial voice
authorship
Category=ATFA
Category=JBSF1
cinema
classical hollywood
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eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminism
film
film and television
film studies
gender studies
history of sound
hollywood
hollywood film
male authority
miss sadie thompson
miss thompson
movie theory
notorious
patriarchal role
physical voice
point of view
rain
representation in film
repression
sadie thompson
silence
sorry wrong number
sound technology
speaking women
sunset boulevard
technology
the spiral staircase
to kill a mockingbird
voice
words and images
Product details
- ISBN 9780520070820
- Weight: 272g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 05 Aug 1991
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Do women in classical Hollywood cinema ever truly speak for themselves? In "Echo and Narcissus", Amy Lawrence examines eight classic films to show how women's speech is repeatedly constructed as a 'problem', an affront to male authority. This book expands feminist studies of the representation of women in film, enabling us to see individual films in new ways, and to ask new questions of other films. Using "Sadie Thompson" (1928), "Blackmail" (1929), "Rain" (1932), "The Spiral Staircase", "Sorry, Wrong Number", "Notorious", "Sunset Boulevard" (1950) and "To Kill a Mockingbird" (1962), Lawrence illustrates how women's voices are positioned within narratives that require their submission to patriarchal roles and how their attempts to speak provoke increasingly severe repression. She also shows how women's natural ability to speak is interrupted, made difficult, or conditioned to a suffocating degree by sound technology itself. Telephones, phonographs, voice-overs, and dubbing are fore grounded, called upon to silence women and to restore the primacy of the image.
Unlike the usage of 'voice' by feminist and literary critics to discuss broad issues of authorship and point of view, in film studies the physical voice itself is a primary focus. "Echo and Narcissus" shows how assumptions about the 'deficiencies' of women's voices and speech are embedded in sound's history, technology, uses and marketing. Moreover, the construction of the woman's voice is inserted into the ideologically loaded cinematic and narrative conventions governing the representation of women in Hollywood film.
Amy Lawrence is Assistant Professor of Drama and Film Studies at Dartmouth College.
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