Introduction p.2 1.Jane Eyre p.2 2.Jane Eyre and the Gaze p.3 2.1. Foucault‚ Gaze and Jane Eyre p.3 2.2. Jane Eyre and the Returned Gaze p.4 3.Jane Eyre and Subjectivity p.6 3.1. Subjectivity as Jane Eyre ’s Strength p.6 3.2. Childhood as Roots to Subjectivity p.8 3.3. Criticisms p.8 Conclusion p.10 Bibliography p.11 Introduction All Charlotte Brontë needed was a woman who would openly speak
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Eye Gaze Communication Boards [pic] Introduction In many cases individuals are unable to communicate with others directly by using oral language‚ hands‚ or other body parts. Because of technology and innovation‚ this population now has the option of utilizing an eye gaze communication system in which a person ’s direct stare can provide a particular selection. With the help of an eye gaze board‚ people whose communication abilities are impaired can still express what they are feeling or
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of empowering vs. disempowering. This analysis will discuss and bring into question how these powerful gender dynamics should be understood as spectators and participants. Through the use of the Gaze‚ I will be analyzing how females are actually empowered by changing the traditional structure of the gaze‚ and the ways we make meaning.
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demonstrate the effect of the male gaze in French oil paintings‚ almost all drawn from the extensive collection from Carnegie Museum of Art and The Albright-Knox Art Gallery. The ten selected works feature one or more female sitters and are painted by male artists from 1870 through 1910. The concept of the gaze in examining visual culture deals with how the audience views the subjects in the presented work‚ in this case‚ oil paintings. There are multiple forms of the gaze that can be characterized by
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The concept of the male gaze is the idea that the audience is forced to view women through the eyes of a hetereosexual male. In regards to the depiction of female criminals in the media‚ the male gaze views them as victims. The woman is almost always looked at as though she was somehow the victim‚ and that the other person involved is at fault. Though‚ if the woman in the case is homosexual‚ she will then be viewed as a man hater‚ because she is not interested in men. She will also be viewed as the
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14‚ 2017 The Shifting of a Male’s Gaze According to the feminist literary theory “The Male Gaze”‚ literary texts have a tendency to portray the world and women from a masculine point of view. These texts present women in terms of stereotypes and as objects of male pleasure. This usually occurs through the way males in a novel describe‚ talk about‚ and view women. In “The Male Gaze‚” there is often one character‚ usually male‚ who is more extreme in his male gaze attitudes towards women than the other
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Megan Boler discusses how a student‚ or one can produce empathy while reading‚ in “The Risks of Empathy: Interrogating Multiculturalism’s Gaze.” Boler believes that the Aristotelian way of producing empathy while reading only produces passive empathy. When passive empathy reading occurs it does not guarantee social change within the reader. It is basically a waste of time trying to identify with the text because there is no action to social justice. Boler argues that social imagination is important
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space to them to recognize the stereotypes [MH10] of black people within the white-saturated and white run media/entertainment industry. This can lead to meaningful inquiry and spark discussion. [MH11] Hooks argues that the black women’s oppositional gaze becomes a fulfillment of civic responsibility “only when individual black women actively resist (Hooks‚128)”. This is in direct opposition to Cox’s argument that “protesting and playing are interconnected (Cox‚141)”. Sometimes play is used as a
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Double-consciousness under the White Gaze in Maud Martha The theme of double-consciousness was first defined by Du Bois in The Souls of the Black Folk. He put the term “double-consciousness” in "a world which yields him no true self-consciousness‚ but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world. It is a peculiar sensation‚ this double-consciousness‚ this sense of always looking at one ’s self through the eyes of others‚ of measuring one ’s soul
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those norms ? The ‘Institutional Gaze’ is known as the ability for an institution to have a constant‚ metaphorical gaze over everyone‚ which leads them to be able to control peoples behaviours at all times. Institutions create sets of rules‚ and regulations that they make known to discipline people in order to keep them to behave within what society views as normal. By looking closely at GoodLife Fitness club we are able to see how they utilize the institutional gaze to discipline their members into
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