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Lesbian Cinema After Queer Theory
Coles
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Lesbian Cinema After Queer Theory in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $157.78

Coles
Lesbian Cinema After Queer Theory in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $157.78
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Headline: A study of spectatorship, desire, identification and identity
Blurb : Lesbianism has received unprecedented screen time in the first decades of the twenty-first century, departing from a prior invisibility which historically was interrupted only by invocations of pathologisation, isolation and tragedy. The lesbian’s delayed and uneasy path towards visibility has coincided with queer theory’s disruption of sexual identity categories, resulting in a comparable invisibility in the critical discourse that might have accounted for such significant representational transformations. In this paradoxical context, Troubling Visibility: The Queerness of Lesbian Cinema theorises the kinds of cinematic language through which desire can be given visual form. Scrutinising the conflations and obscurations induced by legitimacy when sexuality is made visible through sex, the book proposes a feminist framework for understanding the queerness of lesbianism that unsettles the "visibility imperative". Rather than charting a narrative of representational progress, shoring up the lesbian’s categorisation in the newly available terms of the visible, the book reads contemporary cinema through the theories of sexuality that problematise lesbian legibility itself.
Key Features:
Analyses contemporary films in the context of long-standing theoretical debates and representational paradigms
Intervenes in questions of visibility, progress and identity politics
Explores lesbian cinema in the context of political, social and cultural transformations in LGBTQ+ civil rights in the twenty-first century
Proposes the mutual, rather than synonymous, use of "queer" and "lesbian" to describe sexuality on screen
Brings together psychoanalysis, affect theory and theories of space and time to explore the range of ways in which contemporary cinema makes desire legible
Keywords: queer theory; feminist film theory; lesbian sexuality; film and gender; film and affect; identity politics
Subject: Film Studies
Headline: A study of spectatorship, desire, identification and identity
Blurb : Lesbianism has received unprecedented screen time in the first decades of the twenty-first century, departing from a prior invisibility which historically was interrupted only by invocations of pathologisation, isolation and tragedy. The lesbian’s delayed and uneasy path towards visibility has coincided with queer theory’s disruption of sexual identity categories, resulting in a comparable invisibility in the critical discourse that might have accounted for such significant representational transformations. In this paradoxical context, Troubling Visibility: The Queerness of Lesbian Cinema theorises the kinds of cinematic language through which desire can be given visual form. Scrutinising the conflations and obscurations induced by legitimacy when sexuality is made visible through sex, the book proposes a feminist framework for understanding the queerness of lesbianism that unsettles the "visibility imperative". Rather than charting a narrative of representational progress, shoring up the lesbian’s categorisation in the newly available terms of the visible, the book reads contemporary cinema through the theories of sexuality that problematise lesbian legibility itself.
Key Features:
Analyses contemporary films in the context of long-standing theoretical debates and representational paradigms
Intervenes in questions of visibility, progress and identity politics
Explores lesbian cinema in the context of political, social and cultural transformations in LGBTQ+ civil rights in the twenty-first century
Proposes the mutual, rather than synonymous, use of "queer" and "lesbian" to describe sexuality on screen
Brings together psychoanalysis, affect theory and theories of space and time to explore the range of ways in which contemporary cinema makes desire legible
Keywords: queer theory; feminist film theory; lesbian sexuality; film and gender; film and affect; identity politics
Subject: Film Studies



















