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theothermatters

Feminist-sociological perspective on Othering

Category Archives: media

Foto credit: Miramax Films
Credits: Miramax Films

Clara, Ferula and Pancha: the Othered femininities in The House of the Spirits

Posted on 20th July 2015 by Pivec

Recently, I rewatched the film The House of the Spirits (1993, d.: Bille August), not all the way through, but long enough to spot three types of Othered femininities in it.

Femininity is something that I, women or persons, who identify as women, do every day by embodying the cultural script of gender(ed) expectations and norms; how to look, behave, feel, think, what to expect from a society and what society expects from us. The cultural script of what femininity is, modifies historically (i.e. through time in the society) and biographically (i.e. through time in an individual life), producing an array of femininities, differing themselves on the basis of intersecting gender expression, sexual identity, skin colour, ethnicity, class (social, economic, cultural capital), religious background, age, body ability etc. An individual femininity is therefore a cumulation of different social positions, for example: androgynous, bisexual second generation Asian woman, living in Germany, originating from lower middle class with M.A. degree.

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Posted in gender, media | Tagged femininity, Film, intersectionality
FOTO_Head_MagicMike
Credits: Warner Bros

Magic Mike XXL: the non-Othering of sex work, fluid masculinities and women’s pleasures

Posted on 17th July 2015 by Pivec

Positive representations are of great importance when mainstream media portrayals about sex work, gender transgression or pleasures are encoded as ‘bad’, not ‘normal’, Othered and hence ridiculed or sidelined in the film narrative.

However, this is not how the story goes in Magic Mike XXL (MM XXL). MM XXL (2015, d.: Gregory Jacobs) is build around male sex work (i.e. stripping), masculinity as a fluid concept and women as central guilt- and shame-free pleasure seekers with spending power.

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Posted in gender, media | Tagged body, Film, masculinity

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