Maria San Filippo: „Full-Frontal Feminism: Sex Scenes in Jane Campion’s Turn of the Millennium Trilogy”

Podcast
Innsbrucker Gender Lectures
  • IGL72_san_filippo
    73:00
audio
1 órák 09:59 perc
Tat­jana Takševa: "Tracing the Maternal through a Transnational Feminist Perspective"
audio
1 órák 15:05 perc
Mona Mota­kef: „Queering the family?“ Elternschaft und Familie jenseits von Heteronormativität und Zweigeschlechtlichkeit
audio
1 órák 21:03 perc
Helga Krüger-Kirn: "Mütterlichkeit braucht kein Geschlecht. Elternschaft und Gender Trouble"
audio
1 órák 14:18 perc
Karin Neuwirth: "De- und Re-Institutionalisierung von Elternschaft im Recht im 20. /21. Jahrhundert in Österreich"
audio
1 órák 16:12 perc
80. Innsbrucker Gender Lecture mit Susanne Schulz
audio
1 órák 29:13 perc
79. Innsbrucker Gender Lecture mit Bet­tina Bock von Wül­fin­gen
audio
1 órák 07:18 perc
78. Inns­bru­cker Gen­der Lec­ture mit Katha­rina Klapp­heck
audio
59:25 perc
Hannah Fitsch: Extreme brains. Körpernormierungen, neue Bezüglichkeiten und Subjektivierungsweisen des Digitalen am Beispiel der Neurowissenschaften.
audio
1 órák 14:31 perc
Bianca Prietl: "Das Geschlecht der Datafizierung. MachtWissen im digitalen Zeitalter"
audio
1 órák 38 mp.
Ricarda Drüeke - "Dissonante Öffentlichkeiten: Digital vernetzte Medien und rechte Akteur:innen"

This talk regards Jane Campion’s exemplary approach to crafting sex scenes in ways that confront gendered dynamics of power and (visual) pleasure, focusing on the trio of films Campion chose to make in the wake of receiving global acclaim for The Piano (1993). Viewing The Portrait of a Lady (1996), Holy Smoke! (1999), and In the Cut (2003) as an unofficial trilogy, considered within the entwined contexts of pre-/post-9/11 gender anxiety and surveillance culture and of feminist genre revisionism, I explore how these works encapsulate Campion’s singular approach to screening sex.

Maria San Filippo is a 2021-22 Fulbright U.S. Scholar in the Department of American Studies at Universität Innsbruck. She is Associate Professor of Visual and Media Arts at Emerson College and Editor of New Review of Film and Television Studies. She authored the Lambda Literary Award-winning The B Word: Bisexuality in Contemporary Film and Television (2013) and Provocauteurs and Provocations: Screening Sex in 21st Century Media (2021), both published by Indiana University Press, and edited the collection After “Happily Ever After”: Romantic Comedy in the Post-Romantic Age (Wayne State University Press, 2021). Her Queer Film Classics volume on Desiree Akhavan’s Appropriate Behavior (2014) is forthcoming in fall 2022 from McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Comment:
Christian Quendler, Department of American Studies, University of Innsbruck

Moderation:
Cornelia Klecker, Department of American Studies, University of Innsbruck

Szólj hozzá!