形成对立的凝视:学会用钟形钩看

IF 1.4 Q2 COMMUNICATION Womens Studies in Communication Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/07491409.2022.2135905
Courtney M. Cox
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近,我们和一位朋友在喝咖啡时,比较了研究生目前如何在研讨会课程中参与文化研究、文学和流行媒体。他分享了一场关于代表权政治的特别具有挑战性的讨论,碧昂斯成为了一个关键的例子。一名学生立即回应道:“碧昂斯太棒了!”我记得当时我笑了,因为我想我的课程中的学生也会保护他们最喜欢的粉丝。相反,我也清楚地意识到,在所谓的智力探究服务中,课堂是多么容易成为一个“一切都是垃圾”或不可救药的空间。后来,我反思了那次对话,并思考了贝尔胡克可能对那个学生的惊叹做出了什么反应。考虑到胡克自己对这位流行文化偶像的剖析,我怀疑有人会以同样的方式离开课堂。我第一次想到胡克在《卫报》上的一篇文章,她在文章中思考了碧昂斯的专辑《柠檬水》“为观众提供了一场视觉盛宴——展示黑人女性的身体,这种身体跨越了所有的界限。这一切都是关于身体,以及身体作为商品。这当然不是激进或革命性的。从奴隶制到今天,黑人女性的身体,无论是穿还是不穿,都被买卖”(hooks,2016,第5段)。在这里,胡克描述的“视觉盛宴”打破了界限,但复制了黑人女性肉体的历史商品化。她认为,这削弱了作品的革命性潜力。在这篇文章的后面,胡克描述了视觉专辑是如何“[构建]一个强大的象征性黑人女性姐妹情谊,抵抗隐形,拒绝沉默。这本身就是一项不小的成就——它改变了白人主流文化的目光。它挑战我们所有人重新审视,从根本上改变我们对黑人女性身体的看法”(胡克,2016,第8段)。凝视。看。看到了。修订。尽管胡克哀叹《柠檬水》中表现的局限性,但她也承认,选择被人看到,超越仅仅一眼或压抑的凝视,是一项令人不安的任务。这也许是送给从事胡克研究的传播学者的最大礼物:学会观察。她一贯避免扁平化的解释,并倾向于她在各种平台上看到的复杂情况。她认为,形成了一种相反的凝视,
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Developing an Oppositional Gaze: Learning to Look with bell hooks
Over coffee with a friend recently, we compared notes on how graduate students currently engage with cultural studies literature and popular media in seminar courses. He shared a particularly challenging discussion on the politics of representation, where Beyonc e became a key example. One student immediately responded, “Beyonc e is offlimits!” I remember laughing in the moment as I considered how students in my courses also felt protective of their favorite subjects of fandom. Conversely, I am also intimately aware of how easily the classroom becomes a space where “everything is trash” or irredeemable in the supposed service of intellectual inquiry. I later reflected on that conversation and considered how bell hooks might have responded to that student’s exclamation. Given hooks’s own dissection of the pop culture icon, I doubt anyone would have left the classroom seeing ’Yonc e the same way. I first thought of hooks’s piece in The Guardian where she considers how Beyonc e’s album Lemonade “offers viewers a visual extravaganza—a display of black female bodies that transgresses all boundaries. It’s all about the body, and the body as commodity. This is certainly not radical or revolutionary. From slavery to the present day, black female bodies, clothed and unclothed, have been bought and sold” (hooks, 2016, para. 5). Here, the “visual extravaganza” hooks describes breaks boundaries yet replicates the historical commodification of Black female flesh. This, she argues, dilutes the revolutionary potential of the work. Later in the article, hooks describes how the visual album “[constructs] a powerfully symbolic black female sisterhood that resists invisibility, that refuses to be silent. This in and of itself is no small feat—it shifts the gaze of white mainstream culture. It challenges us all to look anew, to radically revision how we see the black female body” (hooks, 2016, para. 8). Gazing. Looking. Seeing. Revisioning. Even as she laments the limits of representation in Lemonade, hooks acknowledges the uneasy task of choosing to be seen, of moving beyond a mere glance or oppressive gaze. This, perhaps, is the greatest gift bestowed upon communication scholars who engage with hooks’s body of work: learning to look. She consistently avoided flattened interpretations and leaned into the complications of what she saw across various platforms. Developing an oppositional gaze, she argues,
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