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Book Cover
Streaming video

Title Laura Mulvey : an interview / Video Data Bank Presentation presents
Published [San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2015
[Chicago, Illinois, USA] : Video Data Bank, 2006
©1992/2006

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Description 1 online resource (1 video file, approximately 30 min.) : sound, color
Series Online access with DDA: Kanopy
Summary Laura Mulvey published her seminal essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" in 1975; it has subsequently become one of the most influential work in film theory. Using a psychoanalytic methodology to discuss spectatorship, it was groundbreaking in its feminist critique of the sadistic, misogynistic mode of classical Hollywood cinema in which women were objects of fetishistic display for male viewers' pleasure. She has also written extensively on melodrama, published three books, and co-directed six films, including Riddles of the Sphinx with Peter Wollen (1974). In this interview, the well-known film theorist describes the melange of cinephilia and Freudian criticism that led to her best-known work. After being exposed to Hollywood cinema through the passionate work of the Cahiers du cinema crowd, Laura Mulvey's intellectual autobiography takes a distinctive turn through her immersion in the collaborative milieu of London's women's movement, where she had formative intellectual encounters and re-gained the pleasure of cinema through her methodological adventures. Mulvey weighs in on the legacy of her "Visual Pleasure" essay and updates her thinking on popular culture, psychoanalysis and semiotics. Mulvey provides context and commentary for other ventures such as her 16mm film ed-theory, her current influences and preoccupations, and talks about how the questions and goals have changed for image theorists of the contemporary age. To think popular culture clearly, not as a "romantic collective unconscious, but as a pool of raw material of images, fantasies, mythologies, personifications that organize individual fantasy, transmute individual fantasy like as it were a kind of shortcut into the social." --Laura Mulvey A historical interview originally recorded in 1992 and re-edited in 2006
Analysis Film Studies
Gender Studies
Performance Art
Notes Title from title frames
Credits Camera, Kate Horsfield ; editor, Blithe Riley
Performer Interviewer: Laurie Milner
Event Originally produced by Video Data Bank in 1992
Notes English language soundtrack with optional English closed-captioning
Subject Mulvey, Laura.
Streaming video.
Internet videos.
streaming video.
Internet videos
Streaming video
Genre/Form Internet videos
Films for the hearing impaired.
Nonfiction films.
Internet videos.
Vidéos sur Internet.
Films pour personnes handicapées auditives.
Films autres que de fiction.
Form Streaming video
Author Milner, Laurie, interviewer
Mulvey, Laura, interviewee.
Horsfield, Kate, director of photography.
Riley, Blithe, editor of moving image work
Art Institute of Chicago. Video Data Bank, distributor.
Kanopy (Firm), publishing company.