Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture, Útgáfur 12-13Indiana University Press, 1989 |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 73
Síða 74
... desire for him . Ann becomes an object of exchange between them . Here Hitchcock's film goes further than the ... desire for each other through the exchange of a woman . In marked con- trast , Hitchcock's film insists that homosexual ...
... desire for him . Ann becomes an object of exchange between them . Here Hitchcock's film goes further than the ... desire for each other through the exchange of a woman . In marked con- trast , Hitchcock's film insists that homosexual ...
Síða 76
... desires . Recognizing himself in Bruno enables Guy to displace those desires onto him . He does not desire Miriam's death , Bruno does . He does not desire Bruno , Bruno desires him . In this respect , Hitchcock's film follows the ...
... desires . Recognizing himself in Bruno enables Guy to displace those desires onto him . He does not desire Miriam's death , Bruno does . He does not desire Bruno , Bruno desires him . In this respect , Hitchcock's film follows the ...
Síða 97
... desire / fear is a quite different dynamic from the operations of the momentary textual effects of a desire uncontaminated by fear , effects which poststructuralist critics sometimes gender as feminine and read as working to interrupt ...
... desire / fear is a quite different dynamic from the operations of the momentary textual effects of a desire uncontaminated by fear , effects which poststructuralist critics sometimes gender as feminine and read as working to interrupt ...
Efni
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