JCM312/Godard and Contemporary Feminism (Discussion)

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MacCabe & Mulvey

  1. MacCabe and Mulvey present a complicated argument about the film, Numero Deux, contending that it is primarily about "the effects of capitalism on sexual relations and the oppression of the working class..." They also link "the oppression of capitalism and the alienation of sexuality."
    • How does Godard represent the economics of prostitution in Vivre sa vie? That is, how would you characterize the economic activity of Nana and the other prostitutes? Are they economically "oppressed"?
    • How does Godard represent the sexuality of prostitution in Vivre sa vie? That is, how would you characterize the sexual activity of Nana and the other prostitutes? Is it "alienated"?
      • You may find it useful to compare Godard's prostitute with prostitutes from other films, such as Pretty Woman.
  2. MacCabe and Mulvey contend, "Female nakedness carries associations of the exploitation of women that almost no degree of formal subversion can displace."

Godard, Brecht & Wollen

  1. Describe at least three ways in which Vivre sa Vie incorporates Brechtian and/or counter-cinema techniques. What impact do these techniques have? What argument would Godard make for using them in a film such as Vivre sa Vie? In other words, what's the point?
  2. Does Vivre sa Vie seem more "Brechtian" or more counter cinema than Breathless? Why or why not?
  3. Toward the end of the film, Luigi "reads" Poe's "Oval Portrait"; but the voice we hear is Godard's. What parallels are there between Poe's story and Godard's film?
    • And what's with the French subtitles in that scene?

Bibliography

  1. Brecht, Bertolt. "The Modern Theatre is the Epic Theatre." In Brecht on Theatre, pp. 33-42. Edited and translated by John Willett. New York: Hill and Wang, 1964.
  2. MacCabe, Colin and Mulvey, Laura. "Images of Woman, Images of Sexuality, in Godard: Images, Sounds, Politics, 79-101. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University, 1980.
  3. Wollen, Peter. "Godard and Counter Cinema: VENT D'EST." In Readings and Writings: Semiotic Counter-Strategies. London: Verso, 1982.

External links