Exploring Culture And Gender Through Film Ebook May 2026
Sciamma inverts every trope. Here, the gaze is female, reciprocal, and non-violent. Marianne looks at Héloïse to paint her, but Héloïse looks back, and their mutual looking generates desire. There is no male character to triangulate their relationship. In one famous scene, the women discuss the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, concluding that Orpheus makes the “poetic choice” to turn around and lose his wife—a metaphor for the male artist sacrificing the female muse for his art. Sciamma’s film rejects this: the artist does not sacrifice her subject; she joins her.
The Gazed and the Grounded: Exploring Culture and Gender Through Narrative Film exploring culture and gender through film ebook
Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window serves as a masterclass in the gendered politics of looking. Confined to a wheelchair, photojournalist L.B. “Jeff” Jefferies (James Stewart) spends his time observing his neighbors across the courtyard. His girlfriend, Lisa Fremont (Grace Kelly), a high-fashion socialite, physically enters his apartment but is initially dismissed as “too perfect” and outside his masculine world of action. Sciamma inverts every trope
These three films represent a trajectory. Rear Window demonstrates the classical, patriarchal, Western model where culture (1950s America) legitimizes male surveillance. Monsoon Wedding shows a postcolonial negotiation, where culture is hybrid and gender roles are contested within the family. Portrait of a Lady on Fire offers a utopian alternative: a film made entirely outside the logic of the male gaze, suggesting that cinema can imagine worlds where gender hierarchy simply does not exist. There is no male character to triangulate their relationship
Culturally, the film argues that gender is not a biological given but a set of restrictions (Héloïse forced into marriage) that, when removed, reveal a fluid, egalitarian intimacy. The absence of men and the rejection of the voyeuristic camera angle (Sciamma insists on two-shots and equal eyelines) propose a new cinematic grammar—one where culture is not a prison but a canvas for mutual creation.
Moving from Hollywood to a transnational co-production, Mira Nair’s Monsoon Wedding complicates any simple reading of “Indian” gender roles. The film follows a Punjabi family in Delhi preparing for an arranged marriage. On the surface, it presents a traditional culture where women’s honor is tied to virginity (the cousin Ria reveals past sexual abuse by a family uncle) and men are expected to be providers.
In her seminal 1975 essay, Laura Mulvey argued that classical Hollywood cinema is built upon three “looks”: that of the camera (recording the event), that of the audience (watching the screen), and that of the characters (interacting with each other). Crucially, these looks are structured to privilege the heterosexual male perspective. The female character is a passive “image” (to-be-looked-at), while the male character is an active “bearer of the look.”