Friday 4 August 2023

The Female Gaze

 

Understanding the Female Gaze

In Barbie and Jane Austin's Emma films.

What is the female gaze? Is it the same as the male gaze? There is a theory that the male gaze is a predatory one, that men are always on the lookout for conquest, therefore their enjoyment of seeing a female is one of how to triumph over her; and yet, men can often be just as romantic and self-sacrificing as women. Some would argue that this self-sacrificing is part of the male DNA, in that men, especially when they become fathers, need to protect the family unit. Therefore, the male gaze is ultimately one in which they are looking for someone to sacrifice for. The female gaze is slightly different: they are looking for a man who can take care of them and any children which they may have together. Now this may all seem stereotypical and out of date; however it has been proven that this is the basic way in which man/woman relationships have worked since the dawn of time.

Let us look at two recent films that some say challenge this. First, the 2020 film Emma. This is based on Jane Austin's book of the early nineteenth century, so surely this cannot be a Woke feminist film? Well no, of course not, but it does revel in the female gaze; the character Emma and the mainly female audience are given the male lead and rakish supporting male character as something to look at and think about. Then we have the new 2023 film Barbie. This, so many of the film reviewers have stated, is an outright piece of Woke feminist garbage. However, as the days go by and more reviewers come to the film and indeed to the reviewers, some are saying that the film is the opposite of Woke and feminist propaganda. The film starts with a take on the 2001 Space Odyssey film's beginning where the apes are infused with intelligence from a mysterious monolith then start to use bones as weapons and tools, thus beginning man's long progress to civilisation. The beginning of the Barbie movie references this and has a huge Barbie appear among young girls playing with baby dolls who then after touching the huge feminist Barbie start to bash their baby dolls in the same fashion as the apes with bones.

The film then goes to Barbie land where all the Barbies rule and the Kens (the male companion of Barbie) are down trodden. Barbie goes through an existential crisis and leaves Barbie land with Ken for the real world to find her girl owner who is very unhappy. In the real world the "Patriarchy" men rule she is treated in a sexist way. However, Ken likes the Patriarchy and brings it back to Barbie land where men then rule what has become Kendom. However, when Barbie returns she sets the men against each other and the Barbies rule again. Only for Barbie to return to the real world as she has discovered she has a vagina and visits a gynaecologist. Could this be a tell tale part whereby the feminist trope has been reversed and Barbies actually want to have babies after all?

Could Barbie actually be an anti-Woke anti-feminist film after all, and the female gaze was more evident in the 2020 Emma film?

By Prayer Crusader St Philomena

1 comment:

  1. I went to see Barbie, and despite some saying that it is an anti-woke film I disagree it is really as woke as they come. Full of feminist and LGBT hints and nods and sometimes even blatantly anti-man. It's a bit of a mess plot-wise perhaps this is a ploy? The cinema was full of young girls giggling along with adult jokes. It is not a film to bring your children to it is subversive and full of feminist toxicity. Heaven forbid the director is rumored to have been given the Narnia franchise.

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