The Matter of Images: Essays on Representation

Couverture
Psychology Press, 2002 - 183 pages

Now published in a revised second edition, The Matter of Images searches through the resonances of the term 'representation', analysing images in terms of why they matter, what they are made of, and the material realities they refer to. Richard Dyer's analyses consider representations of 'out' groups and traditionally dominant groups alike, and encompass the eclectic texts of contemporary culture, from queers to straights, political correctness, representations of Empire and films including Gilda, Papillon and The Night of the Living Dead. Essays new to the second edition discuss Lillian Gish as the ultimate white movie star, the representation of whiteness in the South in Birth of a Nation, and society's fascination with serial killers.

The Matter of Images is distinctive in its commitment to writing politically about contemporary culture, while insisting on the importance of understanding the formal qualities and complexity of the images it investigates.

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Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Introduction
1
In a word
6
The role of stereotypes
11
Seen to be believed some problems in the representation of gay people as typical
19
Homosexuality and film noir
50
Victim hegemonic project
71
Male sexuality in the media
89
Brief affairs
100
Three questions about serial killing
110
Straight acting
118
A Passage to India
122
White
126
Lillian Gish a white star
149
Into the light the whiteness of the South in The Birth of a Nation
158
Index
173
Droits d'auteur

Papillon
103

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