Embodying the Other - A Cross-Cultural Understanding of Misrepresentational Oppression
(2016) FIVK01 20152Film Studies
- Abstract
- This thesis offers a holistic perspective on the phenomenon of embodying Otherface. It provides a deeper insight into the categories Transface and Cripface, the latter being a term for an able person depicting a person with visible or invisible disabilities, also referred to as cripping up. The thesis sums up the plight for rights and acceptance whilst looking at the problems involved with authentic representation in film and media, as well as the lack thereof.
As a contemporary analysis, backed by 102 relevant film references from North America, Europe and Asia over a span of 102 years, it dissects cultural methods of reinforcing stereotypes by depicting Otherness and provides readers with an alternative trans gaze in the future of... (More) - This thesis offers a holistic perspective on the phenomenon of embodying Otherface. It provides a deeper insight into the categories Transface and Cripface, the latter being a term for an able person depicting a person with visible or invisible disabilities, also referred to as cripping up. The thesis sums up the plight for rights and acceptance whilst looking at the problems involved with authentic representation in film and media, as well as the lack thereof.
As a contemporary analysis, backed by 102 relevant film references from North America, Europe and Asia over a span of 102 years, it dissects cultural methods of reinforcing stereotypes by depicting Otherness and provides readers with an alternative trans gaze in the future of filmmaking. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8571167
- author
- Elg, Eva-Marie LU
- supervisor
-
- Olof Hedling LU
- organization
- course
- FIVK01 20152
- year
- 2016
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- Embodiment, trans, the Other, embodying, crip, cinema, cripface, transface, blackface, Europe, Asia, Otherface, reversal, US, voyeuristic, gaze, phenomenology, imperial, colonial, male, critical whiteness, queer, monster, grotesque studies, gender, post-Darwanism, post-colonial, posthumanism, post-humanism, elite, culture, homogenous, industry, star, ableism, ableist, transphobic, show, freak, representation, misrepresentation, traditions, phenomena, bodies, morphing, hijra, Tamil, global, katoey, third gender, invisibility, visibility, uglyface, mediatedness, media, transing communication, animalizing, infantalizing, funny bodies, immoralizing, sexualizing, comedy, as, comparison, social, transing, queering, self-reflection, relations, looking, progressive, progression, freakery, mockery, awards, Academy, ridicule, Sensationalization, Trivialization, Stabilization, Rationalization, exorcized, bounderies, portrayals, violent, hetero-domesticity, violence, India, drag, faux, pathologised, tomboi, Thailand, character, deviant, Non-Normative, Normative, whitewashing, old age, identity, years, 102, monstreous, 2017, 1915, fantasy, stardom, Little Mermaid, figures, non-human, super-human, actor, exploitation, exclusion, transsexual, transversal, transman, transwoman, transgender, funkis, experiments, transperson, misrepresentational, psychology, oppression, North America, patriarchal, Frozen, films, isolated
- language
- English
- id
- 8571167
- date added to LUP
- 2016-02-08 11:04:27
- date last changed
- 2016-02-08 11:04:27
@misc{8571167, abstract = {{This thesis offers a holistic perspective on the phenomenon of embodying Otherface. It provides a deeper insight into the categories Transface and Cripface, the latter being a term for an able person depicting a person with visible or invisible disabilities, also referred to as cripping up. The thesis sums up the plight for rights and acceptance whilst looking at the problems involved with authentic representation in film and media, as well as the lack thereof. As a contemporary analysis, backed by 102 relevant film references from North America, Europe and Asia over a span of 102 years, it dissects cultural methods of reinforcing stereotypes by depicting Otherness and provides readers with an alternative trans gaze in the future of filmmaking.}}, author = {{Elg, Eva-Marie}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Embodying the Other - A Cross-Cultural Understanding of Misrepresentational Oppression}}, year = {{2016}}, }