designing women (and men, and everyone in between)

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Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between) Why Studying Gender Matters

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Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between). Why Studying Gender Matters. What is Gender?. 1950s: biological attributes, sexual characteristics and social roles that characterize a person as male or female. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Why Studying Gender Matters

Page 2: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

What is Gender?

• 1950s: biological attributes, sexual characteristics and social roles that characterize a person as male or female.

• 1960s: social movements begin to locate identity in systems of power; feminism centers ideas of oppression in sex itself

• “Women’s studies” and its various permutations give way to gender studies, recognizing role of the social, performance and art itself in producing gendered bodies.

Page 3: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex (1948)• Men are human, women are “not

men;” they represent sex itself.• Women have no common past or

history, and thus no identity: it becomes the task of feminism to imagine all of these things.

• Men argue that women’s subordination is natural: but isn’t the status of this truth a self-justifying one? Relativism.

• Men and women are united in their mutual and unequal dependence: “To decline to be the Other, to refuse to be a party to the deal – this would be for women to renounce all the advantages conferred upon them by their alliance with the superior caste.”

• Men profit from inequality, and from controlling the terms of inequality

Page 4: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Does visual art have a gender?

Women artists Male artist

Page 5: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Laura Mulvey, “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema,” (1975), film and media studies, Birkbeck College, University of London• Psychoanalysis as a critical tool.• Scopophiia as a source of erotic pleasure that is

structured by gender.• Phallocentric society scripts women as the

passive, gazed-upon figure; men as active lookers. Because of how cinema is structured, the viewer always looks from a male perspective

• In modern film, there is a division of labor in which men act and women inspire action.

• Cinema structures the way women can be looked at.

• Three different ways of looking: the camera, the audience, and the way the characters look at each other within the frame.

• Women’s images have been “stolen” by traditional film, and only by destroying traditional conventions can women regain filmic agency.

Page 6: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Janet Leigh as Marion Crane in “Psycho” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960• A woman• Naked• Terror• What is she looking at?• Where is she looking?• Her open mouth

Page 7: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Christian Dior’s “New Look” Vogue, March 15 1947

Page 8: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Case Study: Judy Chicago

• B. Judith Sylvia Cohen, 1939• Rejected from Chicago Art Institute

in 1956; attends UCLA• 1970: begins teaching “feminist

art” at Fresno State, changes her name to Judy Chicago

• 1971: goes to Cal Arts, establishes Feminist Art Program.

• With Miriam Schapiro, launches Womanhouse as a women’s living and studio space.

• January 1972: Womanhouse opens to the public

• 1974-1979: Creation of The Dinner Party; tours 1979-1981

• Empowering: makes feminism popular

• Essentialist view of art that doesn’t take on questions of power

Page 9: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

The Dinner Party: Eleanor of Aquitaine

Page 10: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

The Dinner Party: Emily Dickinson

Page 11: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Judith Butler: Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990)• Sex is not prior to or

independent of gender: sex and gender depend on each other.

• No gender can exist without cultural acts that make it visible

• Gender is unstable and performed

• Bodies have no identity without the scripts, rehearsals, performances and acts of interpretation that confer it.

Page 12: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Why does gender matter to you, and what you study?

• Because space is gendered and gendering

Page 13: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Why does gender matter to you, and what you study?

• Because everyone is understood through gender and the relationships of power gender signifies – and it’s complicated!

Page 14: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

Why does gender matter to you, and what you study?

• Because gender is a way to understand who and what is being looked at – and who is doing the looking.

Page 15: Designing Women (and Men, and Everyone in Between)

What can you do about it?There is a Gender Studies Course Book

• Foundations of Gender Studies• Performativity and Powerlessness• History of American Advertising• Design/History/Revolution• And many courses taught in Parsons as well

that are listed here!