
Women and American Independent Film
Lizzie Bordon Directing Born In Flames
 Rebecca Miller Directing The Ballad of Jack and Rose Editor: Alex Bean Founding Editor: Cynthia Baron Articles By: Carolyn Jambard-Sweet, Stephen Harrick, Nina Orechwa, Rosalind Sibielski Department of Theatre and Film Bowling Green State University Main Office: 419-372-2222 Fax 419-372-7186 E-mail: theatregeneral@bgsu.edu |
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Editors' Introduction
Taken together, the articles in this issue of The Projector invite us to rethink assumptions about women’s role in American independent film – on screen and off....
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Conceptions of Cool in American Society
Christina Lane’s essay, Just Another Girl Outside the Neo-Indie, addresses the difficulties women directors face in the male dominated film industry.... [READ MORE]
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Two Timing Cinema: The Hybridization of Independent and Mainstream Filmmaking Trends in The Piano
In Jane Campion’s film The Piano (1993), Ada (Holly Hunter), a young widow (and self-proclaimed mute) takes her daughter Flora (Anna Paquin) from their native Scotland to New Zealand during the mid-nineteenth century to marry Alisdair Stewart (Sam Neil), a man to whom her father has promised her hand.... [READ MORE]
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"Something More 'Universal:'" Women, Marketing, and Independent Films
In her essay on the difficulty that women have traditionally had working in the independent film industry, Christina Lane observes that “if a woman’s film fails, executives are more likely to attribute it to her gender than if the same fate befalls a male director”.... [READ MORE]
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Avoiding the Male Gaze: The Search for Alternate Ways of "Viewing" Sexual Difference in U.S. Independent Cinema and U.S. Popular Culture
Laura Mulvey begins her groundbreaking 1973 essay “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” by proposing that “the unconscious of patriarchal society has structured film form” to such an extent that both the visual and the narrative conventions of Hollywood cinema reproduce and reinforce “the straight, socially-established interpretation of sexual difference which controls images, erotic ways of looking and spectacle” within patriarchal culture. [READ MORE]
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