"It's too late…Not for me": The Graduate (1967) and the History of Women

Q4 Arts and Humanities Film and History Pub Date : 2019-06-01 DOI:10.1353/flm.2019.0003
S. Cash
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Abstract

ike Nichols’s The Graduate has been called “a Sixties emblem,”1 and with good reason: the film illustrates some of the defining aspects of the decade, including the hypersensitivity to a generation gap, the radicalization of sexual mores, and the antiestablishment search for authenticity. Yet a major element of the film has been ignored for a half century: the emerging women’s movement. Unsurprisingly, the central female characters, Mrs. Robinson and her daughter, Elaine, gained rather shallow attention at the time of the film's release in 1967. More surprisingly, critical commentary on the two characters since then has continued to lack sufficient analysis. More directly for historians and educators, The Graduate offers a primary historical document of the early Second Wave feminist movement of the 1960s. The characters of Mrs. Robinson and Elaine embody two successive generations of white, affluent women that represent critical changes in the mid-twentieth-century history of American women. By late 1968, only The Sound of Music and Gone With the Wind were more successful films than The Graduate,2 with the film, the director (Mike Nichols), and the actors (Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, and Katharine Ross) earning numerous accolades,3 but, unlike those films, The Graduate resists any inflection toward the epic, staying firmly and modestly inside domestic melodrama. There is no angelic Maria or devilish Scarlett to move the narrative outside the boundaries of family concerns. The film centers on Benjamin Braddock, who, in his listlessness after newly graduating college, has an affair with Mrs. Robinson, the wife of his father’s business partner. Later, however, Ben falls in love with Mrs. Robinson’s daughter, Elaine, who soon discovers the affair. After agonizing attempts to repair his relationship with her, Ben persuades Elaine to leave her husband at the altar. The new couple flee and catch a bus, uncertain of their future but content to leave the traditional marriage dangling in the past. Some commentators have argued that The Graduate lacks sufficient references to iconic Sixties events and therefore does not properly represent the decade. Bethlehem Shoals, writing for Politico in 2012, argues that the film is not “about that fabled decade, its seismic cultural shifts, or the freedom that people found as a result of its progressive politics. What was radical about the film is the love (and lust) story, not what it has to say about the greater world” or “any of the
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“太晚了……不适合我”:《毕业生》(1967)和《女性历史》
比如尼科尔斯的《毕业生》被称为“六十年代的象征”,这是有充分理由的:这部电影展示了那个年代的一些标志性方面,包括对代沟的极度敏感、性观念的激进化,以及对真实性的反建制追求。然而,这部电影的一个主要元素却被忽视了半个世纪:新兴的妇女运动。不出所料,影片的主要女性角色——罗宾逊夫人和她的女儿伊莱恩(Elaine)——在1967年上映时受到的关注相当有限。更令人惊讶的是,从那以后,对这两个角色的评论一直缺乏足够的分析。对于历史学家和教育工作者来说,《毕业生》更直接地提供了20世纪60年代早期第二波女权运动的主要历史文献。罗宾逊夫人和伊莱恩这两个角色代表了连续两代富裕的白人女性,代表了20世纪中期美国女性历史上的重大变化。到1968年末,只有《音乐之声》和《乱世佳人》比《毕业生》更成功,电影、导演(迈克·尼科尔斯)和演员(达斯汀·霍夫曼、安妮·班克罗夫特和凯瑟琳·罗斯)赢得了无数赞誉。但与这些电影不同的是,《毕业生》抵制任何史诗般的变化,坚定而谦逊地停留在国内情节剧中。没有天使般的玛丽亚或魔鬼般的斯嘉丽将叙事移出家庭关切的界限。影片以本杰明·布拉多克为中心,他大学毕业后无精打采,与他父亲生意伙伴的妻子罗宾逊夫人有染。然而,后来,本爱上了罗宾逊太太的女儿伊莱恩,伊莱恩很快就发现了这段婚外情。经过痛苦的尝试修复他与她的关系,本说服伊莱恩离开她的丈夫在圣坛。这对新婚夫妇逃离并赶上了一辆公共汽车,他们不确定他们的未来,但满足于让传统婚姻在过去摇摆。一些评论家认为,《毕业生》缺乏对60年代标志性事件的充分参考,因此不能恰当地代表那个年代。伯利恒·肖尔斯(Bethlehem Shoals)在2012年为《政治》(Politico)撰文称,这部电影不是“关于那个传说中的十年,它的地震般的文化转变,或者人们因其进步的政治而获得的自由”。这部电影的激进之处在于爱情(和欲望)的故事,而不是它对更大的世界的看法。
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Film and History
Film and History Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
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