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blog post 5

Posted by Miriam Aamir on

According to the author in on page 819 Fetishisms meant”  A fetish of this sort, doubly derived from contrary ideas, is of course especially durable. In other instances the divided attitude shows itself in what the fetishist does with his fetish, whether in reality or in his imagination.  He also states that there are many and weighty additional proofs of the divided attitude of fetishist to the question of the castration  of women”. The definition shows the concept of fetishism and the divide in fetishism towards their actions and thoughts whether it’s in reality or in imagination.

In this article talks about divided attitude which says” Returning to my description of fetishism, I may say that there are many and weighty additional proofs of the divided attitude of fetishists to the question of the castration of women”. Some of the examples stated is ” In him the need to carry out the castration which he disavows has come to the front. His action contains in itself the two mutually incompatible assertions: ‘ the woman has still got a penis’ and my father has castrated the woman”. Another variant which is also a parallel to fetishism in social psychology, might be see in  in the Chinese custom of mutilating the female foot”. These examples try to example the idea about women which reflect a phycological phenomenon to fetishism. The second example try to explain the Chinese practice of foot binding which is a culture tradition involving the mutilation of female feet to make them smaller and pleasing.

Some of the barrier Freud encounters is Cultural sensitivity which is the awareness of regarding sexuality. Also there is  Human psychology which Freud tries to express that human sexuality is multifaced and has a difficult processes. There is also Empirical evidence which shows how Freud has a theory on different definition explain fetishism due to the empirical date.  There is also Subjectivity of interpretation which tries to show awareness of the psychoanalytic interpretation and the different behaviors of fetishism, Lastly there is evolution of psychoanalytic theory this shows Freud ideas evolve and all his different theories. His hesitation about fetishism about his reflecting about different concepts.

Freud hesitation in his analysis about fetishism from combination of factors including cultural sensitivities, the complexity of human psychology, limitations in empirical evidence, the subjectivity of interpretation and the evolution of his own theoretical framework. These are all the different types of ideas and how Freud tries to explain about fetishism in this article.

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Blog Post #5 – Fetishism

Posted by Keanne Fatalla on

In his work “Fetishism” Freud makes a bold statement where he announces that every fetish is a substitute for the penis, not just any penis but the woman’s penis. He gives an example of one of his patients whose fetish was the nose, he ruminates on why the fetishist (the patient) fetishizes the nose. His first assertion was that the patient simply refused his perception that women do not possess a penis which Freud immediately shuts down however his reason was not in any way conventional in regards to how me or you would think why this assertion is wrong. He says “No, that could not be true: for if a woman had been castrated, then his own possession of a penis was in danger.” Meaning that rather than it being something pleasurable or arousing for the boy which a fetish supposed to do in this context, the image of castration would quickly replace that feeling with revulsion or rebellion. Also, the reason why I believe he uses castration here is because if the boy refuses to believe that a woman does not possess a penis and thus believing that they do have a penis then that would imply that the woman has been castrated because it just isn’t there or not there anymore. His next assertion is that the boy “scotomizes” (forgets) his perception of the woman’s lack of a penis. However, this would not make sense because it also implies that his perception of a woman not having a penis would be entirely wiped out and as Freud rebuttals, “on the contrary, we see that the perception has persisted, and that a very energetic action has been undertaken to maintain the disavowal.” Thus assertion 2 isn’t correct either because rather than forgetting, the patient seems to be keenly aware of that fact a woman doesn’t have a penis but is also actively believing that they do. His third and final assertion is that the boy represses his perception of a woman’s lack of a penis by substituting it with something else. As Freud says “He has retained that belief, but he has also given it up…in his mind the woman has got a penis, in spite of everything; but this penis is no longer the same as it was before…Something else has taken its place… and now inherits the interest which was formerly directed to its predecessor” Meaning that the boy still believes that a woman possesses a penis but since doing so would put the image of castration in his mind, he instead focuses on the idea that maybe a woman does possess a penis but it’s not in the location that you would normally think a penis is located at, say, the nose for example and thus a fetish is born at least according to Freud. This however has a downside and it’s the aversion to the actual female genitals which is the symbol of repression that takes place within him.  

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Blog Post #5

Posted by Stevie Dattomo (He/Him) on

Mulvey’s essay was a difficult essay for me (not just me, I hope), but I wanted to try to break it down and contribute with a bit of my own experience. Apart from the very great detail Mulvey takes to break down the dichotomy between scopophilia and ego libido, what stood out to me was the discussion of camera work and the camera’s place in highlighting those two aspects of narrative film. The camera is human perception — at least it tries its best to replicate it — and its ultimate goal is to remove/blur the screen space so as to better integrate ourselves into the screen. This is essentially ego libido, as it gives the spectator a sense of power that the protagonist has. 

While reading this, it reminded me of Oppenheimer, and the “ideal” viewing experience instructed by the director, Christopher Nolan. Nolan said that the intended way to view the film was in 70mm IMAX, it was the most immersive formatting that would project you into the film in the closest way possible. However, I do not think that the tragedy of the atomic bomb is necessarily what Mulvey is arguing. For that, look at 2011’s Drive, where Ryan Gosling is a strong, silent stuntman-criminal who pushes Carey Mulligan into the corner of the elevator to kiss her before killing the hitman next to him. It feels as though the film epitomized Mulvey’s work to a tee, Mulligan is only seen as a mother in dresses and skirts, tending to her child and being submissive to her husband. Gosling, on the other hand, is domineering, literally driving the plot of the story (which revolves around him “helping” her without considering her desires). 

As a cisgendered, straight, white man, it took an embarrassingly long time to not only be made aware of this reading of narrative film, but it is truly only very recently where it has become apparent to me. Most teen comedies of the 80s (Fast Times, Sixteen Candles, etc.) revolve around the portrayal of women as strict, still images that are there solely for the attention of the male-centric audience and protagonists. Another unfortunately too-perfect moment is when Anthony Michael Hall’s character in Candles takes advantage of and rapes a drunk girl he was going to “take home.” That film supports Mulvey’s argument because of how awfully true it is, and why this analysis of narrative cinema needs to be more popular.

The last film I will relate to the text is Chantal Ackerman’s Je, Tu, Il, Elle, as it is a great example of alternate cinema that Mulvey states will break up this traditional pleasure-driven view of cinema. In the film, a depressed girl, recently broken up with her girlfriend, removes all the furniture from her apartment except her mattress, walks around the room naked, and eats sugar from a bag while trying to come up with a letter to send to her ex. character finally gets to see her ex again, in which the film cuts to a fifteen minute sex scene between the two characters, ending with Ackerman being kicked out once again. A perfect example of how cinema does not have to be pleasure-driven, as the full frontal nudity of the final scene is very raw but certainly not glamorous. It does not portray one dominating another, it does not even portray a man and a woman. It is just sex, the authentic experience of emotion, and does not attempt to sexualize it in any way. Bringing it back to camera work, which Mulvey finds so profound (as do I), it is fixed, only switching angles sparingly. Unlike most sex scenes, which highlight the bodies of women in gross ways and attempt to make the viewer feel that he is the one taking control over the woman, Je, Tu, Il, Elle pairs the often-isolating nature of sex with the emotional intimacy it provides. The fixed camera angles only keep the audience away from that moment because it is not our moment, it is theirs and theirs alone.

I hope I did not stray too far from the text, but I am minoring in film and combining it with my English major scratches the analytical part of my brain.

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midterm exam key

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

As promised, here are answers to the midterm questions. I didn’t have a very good key from prior terms, and I asked a lot of new questions on new texts, so I had to “take” my own exam, answering all 18 questions.

Uh, it was pretty tough. Be sure to check your iffy answers against mine, and feel free to reach out if you’re still puzzled on anything. Good review for the final exam, which will emphasize the new material from Freud onward but will also bring back some of this older material.

 

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useful walk-through of Mulvey’s essay

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Here’s a splendid 20 min lecture on Mulvey’s argument. The lecturer has an extensive array of podcasts on hundreds of theoretical pieces, including some stuff that we’ve read together, here.

Laura Mulvey’s “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema”

In this episode, I present Laura Mulvey’s short essay, “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema.” If you want to support me, you can do that with these links: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theoryandphilosophy paypal.me/theoryphilosophy Twitter: @DavidGuignion IG: @theory_and_philosophy Podbean: https://theoretician.podbean.com/

And here are some examples (with very little contextualization) from the kinds of classic Hollywood cinema that Mulvey analyzes:

Laura Mulvey-Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema examples

Comm Studies 483

And here’s a moving short piece on the model and actress Brooke Shields’ reflections on her being rendered as an object for others’ scopophilia in today’s New York Times. It’s not super theoretical but does convey a vivid sense of the human cost of the patriarchal cinematic apparatus that Mulvey analyzes [remember that you can get free digital access via the Library’s site]:

Opinion | Brooke Shields, Social Media and the Public’s Withering Gaze

Some kids raised in the spotlight feel that their formative years were stolen.

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Judith Butler in the news

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Somewhat scandalously, we’re not reading Judith Butler’s work this term, but Butler is one of the preeminent theorists of gender of the last 30 years, associated above all with the idea of “performativity” in gender.

In this Sunday’s NYT Magazine, there’s an inteview with Butler talking about the new book Who’s Afraid of Gender? The interview is fascinating and touches on a number of issues we’ll be talking about in the coming weeks. It also shines a bright light on the way “theory,” which seems like the most esoteric, oddball set of texts and topics, occupies center stage in our political discourse. Read the COMMENTS section: it’s really something to see how threatened many readers feel by, if not “gender” exactly, by engaging questions of gender with the thoroughness and skepticism that theoretical thinking demands:

Judith Butler Thinks You’re Overreacting

How did gender became a scary word? The theorist who got us talking about the subject has answers.

B

 

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Freud in the news!

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

The New York Times had a piece last year  on renewed interest in Freudian models for psychotherapy and in the culture more broadly. Enjoy!

Not Your Daddy’s Freud

A new generation of analysts and patients is embracing the father of psychoanalysis – in magazines and memes and many hours on the couch.

 

Also, I’m officially reminding you that a) reading the NYT regularly is basic “equipment for living” for an educated citizenry and b) you all have free digital access from the Library (works for computers, iOS, and Android devices).

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what’s a rebus?

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

In case anyone’s not clear on the “rebus” analogy in Freud’s stuff on dreams, here’s an example:  free-beer-rebus

The broader point is that the manifest content of a dream contains a network of signs that seem nonsensical when read “straight’ but prove, on further examination, to contain a disguised or coded meaning.

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reading for tomorrow

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Just a quick note that a) there are study questions to guide your reading of the Freud selection, from The Interpretation of Dreams (1900); and b) there are none for the essay by Meltzer: this piece is incredibly helpful in giving an overview of the tricky concept of “unconscious” and for explaining why psychoanalysis, which of course grows out of a clinical “talking cure” aimed at addressing mental illness, has applications for literature and vice versa.

As you read the Freud text, I think it’s helpful to think about how Freud, very early in his career, is founding a new discourse. Just as Nietzsche devised a radically new way of thinking about language as the construction of “hives” rather than a mirror of reality in the 1880s, and just as Marx revised the way we understand literature and other cultural fields as “refractions” or distortions of real conditions, Freud is introducing a radically new way of understanding subjectivity. Freud grounds this new conception of the “subject” in the terra incognita of the “Es” (in German, the “it,” lamentably translated in English as “id,” which just means “it” in Latin). This “It” is “in” us in some sense, and it our engine that provides our subjectivity with its “motive force,” but we don’t “know it” and we can only receive its transmissions indirectly. In the passage from Dreams, we’ll see Freud struggle with this problem, using dreams as (as he famously put it) the “royal road to the unconscious.” But the metaphor fails in that we can’t “go there.” Instead, we get strangely coded messages from this impenetrable realm, and Freud (in a rather Saussurean move) spends the piece looking for the “langue” that structures the “parole” the dream gives us (the part we remember when we wake up). What makes Freud’s work so challenging is that he tries to tease out the “grammar” of the “unsayable” language of the unconscious, an agent that speaks opaquely, via dreams and “parapraxes” (slips of the tongue and other “accidents”) and symptoms and fantasies and obsessions and, yes, poems and plays and novels and films.

Enough! I just wanted to give some sense of what we’re in for over the next few weeks.

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why reading Marx matters

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

I hope you’re all recovering from the challenging midterm: I’ve rolled up my sleeves and am grading now (which is definitely on the “alienated” side of any prof’s labor).

Meanwhile, I came across a review of a book by Yanis Varoufakis, a Greek economist, arguing that we have entered a new phase of economic development that represents a return of sorts, a “technofeudalist” era. The article rightly points out that there’s a wave of analyses at present making parallel arguments–the article mentions McKenzie Wark’s Capital is Dead, and I would add Shoshana Zuboff’s The Age of Surveillance Capitalism–that, whatever their differences, believe that we have reached an inflection point where the development of global capitalism out of the ashes of medieval feudalism to the present is giving way to … something new.

We just took a little sip of Marx, and you’d need some big gulps from Capital to properly contextualize Varoufakis’s book, but the bit from Capital we read together, with its attempt to show the distinctiveness of capitalism and the use of money as “universal equivalent” by contrasting it with feudal barter, Crusoe’s self-accounting, and the idealized communist collective organization of labor through planning, give us enough light to read by in assessing these recent books.

See you Thursday, when we’ll reel back the histori-o-meter to 1900 or so and run it back again, looking at the development of theories of the psyche and the subject from Freud onward.

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