Death Becomes Her. Implicit Religion, Relics, Myth-Making and the Witch Complex in Visual Representations of Women in Film Noir. A Case Study Cover Image
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Death Becomes Her. Implicit Religion, Relics, Myth-Making and the Witch Complex in Visual Representations of Women in Film Noir. A Case Study
Death Becomes Her. Implicit Religion, Relics, Myth-Making and the Witch Complex in Visual Representations of Women in Film Noir. A Case Study

Author(s): Andrada Fătu-Tutoveanu
Subject(s): Gender Studies, Cultural history, Recent History (1900 till today), Film / Cinema / Cinematography
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: Film Noir; Myth-Making; Representation; Gender; Alfred Hitchcock; Rebecca (1940); Laura (1944);

Summary/Abstract: While cinema and especially the Hollywood Golden Age has constructed a mythology of its own, cinematic storytelling has also recycled heavily on classic mythologies and cultural stereotypes. The female figures have represented during the Hollywood Golden Age and in film noir in particular a special category from this perspective, being both deified and demonized, depicted as goddesses, vampires, fascinating ghosts and, above all, femmes fatales. Classic feminist studies have argued that both this depiction/representation, verbal or visual, and the intended spectator, are male. Based on a comparative case-study, the current paper discusses the manner in which what I call a cinematic witch complex is constructed through either hiding or revealing in order to conclude which is more efficient in the process of gendered myth-making.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 43
  • Page Range: 148-157
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English