Seduction incarnate: Pre-production code Hollywood and possessive spectatorship

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article considers questions of embodied visuality, sexuality, and spectatorship in the pre-Production Code filmmaking of 1920s/30s Hollywood. With Laura Mulvey’s theorization of possessive spectatorship in new media and Jennifer M. Barker’s embodied approach to early cine-eroticism providing a conceptual framework, “Seduction Incarnate” suggests that the very elements of momentum and stillness, elusiveness and control examined by these scholars are incorporated into the sensual subjectivities of pre-Code films; and through techniques like closeups, elliptical montages, and suggestive fade-outs, these filmic bodies make material the dramas of revelation and concealment that drive the narratives themselves. In close readings of movies like The Divorcée (1930), The Cheat (1931), Red-Headed Woman (1932), Three on a Match (1932), and Baby Face (1933) — as well as a consideration of their remediation (following Bolter and Grusin’s terms) in homeviewing collections and on the internet — the article proposes that pre-Code productions invite the intimate visuality enabled by contemporary viewing practices, even as they assert the autonomy of their cine-subjectivities. No longer forbidden but still provocative, these films continue to engage their viewers in a flirtatious visual pleasure: promising possession while eluding its grasp.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)39-61
Number of pages23
JournalCinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image
Volume3
Publication statusPublished - 20 Dec 2012

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • censorship
  • embodied visuality
  • new media
  • pre-production code Hollywood
  • spectatorship

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