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JACKI WILLSON is a Cultural Studies lecturer in Fashion, Textiles and Jewellery at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London. She is the author of The Happy Stripper: Pleasures and Politics of the New Burlesque (I.B.Tauris, 2008).
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âMakes an important, timely and provocative intervention into debates about performance and objectification. [âŠ] Jacki Willson has a way of making hugely original statements that make sense of what have felt like intractably complex and polarised debates.â
DEBRA FERREDAY
author of Online Beginnings
First published in 2015 by
I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd
London âą New York
www.ibtauris.com
Copyright © 2015 Jacki Willson
The right of Jacki Willson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Every attempt has been made to gain permission for the use of the images in this book. Any omissions will be rectified in future editions.
References to websites were correct at the time of writing.
International Library of Cultural Studies: 27
ISBN: 978 1 78076 284 5 (PB)
978 1 78076 283 8 (HB)
eISBN: 978 0 85773 999 5
A full CIP record for this book is available from the British Library
A full CIP record is available from the Library of Congress
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: available
Typesetting and eBook by Tetragon, London
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âList of Illustrations
Audacity Chutzpah © Photograph by kind permission of Terry Mendoza, www.retrophotostudio.co.uk.
JĂŒrgen Teller, CĂ©line campaign, Vogue, Fall 2013 © JĂŒrgen Teller and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.
JĂŒrgen Teller, CĂ©line campaign, Vogue, Fall 2013 © JĂŒrgen Teller and Lehmann Maupin, New York and Hong Kong.
Sophia St. Villier, Naked Girls Reading © Tigz Rice Studios
www.tigzrice.com.
Sophia St. Villier, Naked Girls Reading © Steve Hart.
Dawn Woolley, The Substitute (Holiday) (2007â8), 1m Ă 1m, C-type print © the artist.
Dawn Woolley, Cut to the Measure of Desire (Vogelen performance), Tableau Vivant (20 minute duration) at City Road Conservative Club, Cardiff, 2010 © Melissa Jenkins.
Dawn Woolley, Cut to the Measure of Desire (full stage). Tableau Vivant installation at City Road Conservative Club, Cardiff, 2010 © the artist.
Gwendoline Lamour, The Swing, Belowzero, London, 2008 © the artist.
Audacity Chutzpah © Photograph by kind permission of Terry Mendoza, www.retrophotostudio.co.uk.
Dusty Limits, Dr. Sketchyâs London © James Millar.
Dusty Limits, Dr. Sketchyâs London © James Millar.
Bettsie Bon Bon, Dr. Sketchyâs London © James Millar.
Bettsie Bon Bon, Dr. Sketchyâs London © James Millar.
Tricity Vogue, Dusty Limits, Bettsie Bon Bon and Clare-Marie Willmer, Dr. Sketchyâs London © James Millar.
Sigalit Landau, Barbed Hula, 2000, Video, 1:52 © the artist.
Sigalit Landau, Barbed Hula, 2000, Video, 1:52 © the artist.
Sigalit Landau, Barbed Hula, 2000, Video, 1:52 © the artist.
Sigalit Landau, Barbed Hula, 2000, Video, 1:52 © the artist.
Penny Dreadful © Dave Glossop.
Mamzelle Dotty © Monika Marion.
Mamzelle Dotty © Riksh Upamaya.
Mister Joe Black © Scott Chalmers.
Leggy Pee and Charles M. Montgomery © Ian Sloan.
Mamzelle Dotty © Silvia Cruz.
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âIntroduction
Being Gorgeous and Feminism
Audacity Chutzpah
© Photograph by kind permission of Terry Mendoza, www.retrophotostudio.co.uk
In 2006 I first saw the film Marie Antoinette. It was full of enticing imagery: impossibly tall wigs as well as gorgeous colourful food which women gorged on with gusto. It was sensual and highly visual, like a performing painting or sculpture. There was a sense of fun, exuberance and anarchic play. It was a visual treat, and signposted something at play in culture at large. This film was set against a popular culture where bodies were being defined and controlled in a particular way; the women in Marie Antoinette, however, were acting indifferently and having a ball. This cinematic painting appeared at a similar time to other visual feasts such as new burlesque and, in the world of music, Lady Gaga. This was an indulgent display of revealing flesh, decadent dress and confident gestures.
There was something going on here that I needed to explore in more depth; something that I touched upon in my last book, The Happy Stripper: Pleasures and Politics of the New Burlesque, but did not fully elucidate. The main thrust of my argument in The Happy Stripper was that performers used flamboyant sexual display as an ironic means of challenging stereotypes, stereotypes that they hammed up and performed with a smile, a wink and a shimmy. This was a politicized display that was both pleasurable and âknowingâ. The performances were signposting a different relationship to the audience, where âbeing-looked-at-nessâ was neither passive nor vacant, and âlookingâ was neither hostile nor sexist. In fact, what was being created was a different kind of politics, which challenged assumptions about power hierarchies in terms of spectatorship and objectification. The power dynamic of the âmale gazeâ identified in Laura Mulveyâs seminal essay, âVisual pleasure and narrative cinemaâ (1975)1 is one where the spectator identifies with an active male posturing himself as âthe bearer of the lookâ.2 The manner in which the camera frames the âwoman as imageâ3 into passive âto-be-looked-at-nessâ4 creates a âworld ordered by sexual imbalanceâ5 that drives the narrative forward.
However, I would like to revise scholarly assu...