High contrast race and gender in contemporary Hollywood films by Sharon Willis.
Material type:
- 0822320290 (cloth : alk. paper)
- 082232041X (pbk. : alk. paper)
- 070 WIL
- PN1995.9.S47 W56 1998
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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ICES Colombo | General Book Collections | 070 WIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 003697 |
Includes index.
Pt. I. Battles of the Sexes. 1. Mutilated Masculinities and Their Prostheses: Die Hards and Lethal Weapons. 2. Insides Out: Public and Private Exchanges from Fatal Attraction to Basic Instinct. 3. Combative Femininity: Thelma and Louise and Terminator 2 -- Pt. II. Ethnographies of the "White" Gaze. 4. Do the Wrong Thing: David Lynch's Perverse Style. 5. Tell the Right Story: Spike Lee and the Politics of Representative Style. 6. Borrowed "Style": Quentin Tarantino's Figures of Masculinity.
In High Contrast, Sharon Willis examines the dynamic relationships between racial and sexual difference in Hollywood film from the 1980s and 1990s.
Seizing on the way these differences are accentuated, sensationalized, and eroticized on the screen - most often with little apparent regard for the political context in which they operate - Willis restores that context through close readings of a range of movies from cinematic blockbusters to the work of the new auteurs, Spike Lee, David Lynch, and Quentin Tarantino.
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