Intimate Violence: Hitchcock, Sex, and Queer Theory

Intimate Violence: Hitchcock, Sex, and Queer Theory

by David Greven
Intimate Violence: Hitchcock, Sex, and Queer Theory

Intimate Violence: Hitchcock, Sex, and Queer Theory

by David Greven

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Overview

Intimate Violence explores the consistent cold war in Hitchcock's films between his heterosexual heroines and his queer characters, usually though not always male. Decentering the authority of the male hero, Hitchcock's films allow his female and queer characters to vie for narrative power, often in conflict with one another. These conflicts eerily echo the tense standoff between feminism and queer theory. From a reparative psychoanalytic perspective, David Greven merges queer and feminist approaches to Hitchcock. Using the theories of Melanie Klein, Greven argues that Hitchcock's work thematizes a constant battle between desires to injure and to repair the loved object. Greven develops a theory of sexual hegemony. The feminine versus the queer conflict, as he calls it, in Hitchcock films illuminates the shared but rivalrous struggles for autonomy and visibility on the part of female and queer subjects. The heroine is vulnerable to misogyny, but she often gains an access to agency that the queer subject longs for, mistaking her partial autonomy for social power. Hitchcock's queer personae, however, wield a seductive power over his heterosexual subjects, having access to illusion and masquerade that the knowledge-seeking heroine must destroy. Freud's theory of paranoia, understood as a tool for the dissection of cultural homophobia, illuminates the feminine versus the queer conflict, the female subject position, and the consistent forms of homoerotic antagonism in the Hitchcock film. Through close readings of such key Hitchcock works as North by Northwest, Psycho, Strangers on a Train, Spellbound, Rope, Marnie, and The Birds, Greven explores the ongoing conflicts between the heroine and queer subjects and the simultaneous allure and horror of same-sex relationships in the director's films.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190214173
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/13/2017
Pages: 296
Sales rank: 870,426
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

David Greven is Professor of English at the University of South Carolina. He publishes in two fields, nineteenth century American literature and Film Studies. Greven specializes in psychoanalytic theory, queer theory, and gender studies. He has written studies of same-sex desire in the antebellum United States, Nathaniel Hawthorne's work and Freudian literary theory, the woman's film, masculinity in contemporary Hollywood, and Hitchcock's influence on the filmmakers of the Seventies.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction: Intimate Violence
Chapter 1: Queer Hitchcock: Psycho and Northwest by Northwest
Chapter 2: "You're A Strange Girl, Charlie": Sexual Hegemony in Shadow of a Doubt
Chapter 3: Mirrors without Images: Spellbound
Chapter 4: Making a Meal of Manhood: Rope, Orality, and Queer Anguish
Chapter 5: The Fairgrounds of Desire: Paranoia and Masochism in Strangers on a Train
Chapter 6: The Death-Mother in Psycho: Hitchcock, Femininity, and Queer Desire
Chapter 7: Marnie's Queer Resilience
Epilogue: Melanie's Birds: Deconstructing the Heroine
Notes
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