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Lecture 1: The Construction of Sexuality

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Title: Lecture 1: The Construction of Sexuality


1
Lecture 1The Construction of Sexuality
  • Why is sexuality
  • a construction?

2
  • The media what do the media consist of?
  • Syllabus A no. of concepts
  • Lecture 1 Social Constructionism, Maintexts/
    Subtexts

3
Bluebeard(???)
  • Bluebeard a rich and handsome man in France?
    kind man whose wives died one way or another ?
    forever getting married
  • A new girl was happily married to him and they
    lived in the huge castle....
  • One day, Bluebeard had to leave the castle
  • his new wife took care of all the keys she must
    never use the smallest one that opened the small
    room at the far end of the corridor
  • Curious? opened the door ? the dead bodies of his
    former wives hanging inside the room .
  • she locked the room again
  • The key stained with blood ?could not be rubbed/
    washed away ....
  • to be continued

4
Social Constructionism
  • ??????
  • -ism . E.g. romanticism, realism . What
    do they mean?
  • A school of thought which holds that things taken
    by granted by people are in fact the results
    constructions - of social forces and
    institutions.
  •  
  • A Key figure Michel Foucault (1926-84)
  • Power determines right and wrong, normal
    and abnormal.
  • Relevance to this course Categories of gender
    and sexuality are not natural and inborn, but
    is continuously conditioned and shaped by social
    forces.
  •  

5
Examples .
  • Influences of Christianity on sexual attitudes
  • (According to St. Paul, sex is bad highest form
    of lovelove for God
  • Later Reformation and Protestantism Priests
    allowed to have their families
  • ? post-WWII? 1960s liberal attitude
  • Christianity still a strong hold on values today
    pre-marital sex is forbidden Good Christians
    should act accordingly)
  • Lecture 5 Social constructionist perspective on
    sexual orientation/ homosexuality
  • Other examples
  • What about the image of menopausal (???) women
  • (irritable, difficult)? Beauty/ Physical
    attractiveness? ? are these social constructions?

6
  • Lets return to Bluebeard .
  • Bluebeard returned to the castle earlier than
    expected? demanded the key back? discovered what
    happened
  •  
  • Angered he wanted to murder his wife
  • His wifes sister and 2 brothers arrived on time
    to save her?they killed Bluebeard
  • Happy ending the woman was later married to a
    genuinely good man?forgot what happened
  •  
  • The end
  • is NOT the end .

7
Main Text vs Subtext(s)
  • The story you read is the main text there is/
    are subtext(s) in it. 
  • 1.      It is important for women to obey what
    men say gender inequality.
  • 2. The wife is finally saved by her elder
    brothers, not her sister.
  •  
  • 3. The wife can only overcome the trauma after
    being re-married to a good man unable to
    overcome it on her own.
  •  
  • 4. It is further possible to identify symbols in
    the story the castle is a prison the key to the
    room ? the key to the virginity belt.
  • (find out more about the virginity belt .)

8
  • What are maintexts in this case?
  • The story itself
  • There might be many versions (e.g. on the
    Internet) ? but relatively objective
  • What are the subtexts
  • sub ? underneath
  • The messages hidden in/ underlying the maintexts
  • Relatively subjective? depend on the
    interpretation of the audience/ reader

9
Why did I bring up this story?
  • Before TV, the radio, or even the newspapers were
    invented, folktales/ fairytales (collected by the
    Grimm Brothers Written by Andersen) important
    forms of media.
  • told by parents/ adults to children? were passed
    down many generations in various forms? important
    tools of socialisation, and even of control.
  • 1. Within the story, the husband wants to control
    his wife
  • 2. The story shapes our ways of thinking
  • those with the power to invent stories ?
    control the public? back to social
    constructionism
  •  
  • Next time Cinderella and the male gaze

10
 Quills
  • based on real-life figures and real places .
  • Socio-historical Background Mainly a no. of
    years after the French Revolution France under
    Napoleon
  • 4 major characters (??)
  • Marquis de Sade (Geoffrey Rush)
  • French writer of highly erotic stories
  • The Priest (Joquain Phoenix)
  • Head of the Charenton Asylum
  • Madelaine (Kate Winslet)
  • A chambermaid responsible for cleaning dirty
    linen and helps smuggling out pages of his book
  • The Psychiatrist (Michael Caine)
  • Sent by Napoleon in an attempt to change (i.e.
    reform) the writers behaviour
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