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Browsing by Author "Marsha Orgeron, Committee Member"

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    The Commodification of Nostalgia: Star Wars, Advertising, and The Collectors
    (2007-07-23) Partin, Joseph Daniel; Devin Orgeron, Committee Chair; Sarah Stein, Committee Member; Marsha Orgeron, Committee Member
    "The Commodification of Nostalgia" and the documentary The Collectors analyze the Star Wars Saga and the marketing practices employed by Kenner and Lucasfilm to sell Star Wars toys to young and old generations. Both works examine the effect of advertising on adult males and their continued desire to collect (and horde) Star Wars products. I contend that the early commercials enabled the toy manufacturer the opportunity to instill consumerism in young children; and that the prequel films relied on the nostalgic desires of adult male audiences to buy the new commodities. The recent toys allowed the adult male public — that grew up with the old films—the chance to relive their childhood by purchasing new Star Wars merchandise. I argue that this practice exemplifies the emptiness and superficiality of current consumer culture.
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    Different People
    (2008-04-16) Bryan, Jason Damon; Marsha Orgeron, Committee Member; Maria Pramaggiore, Committee Member; Wilton Barnhardt, Committee Chair
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    "Fascinated Victims:" Aspects of Abjection in the Films of David Cronenberg
    (2007-11-01) Sullivan, Gordon Matthew; Devin Orgeron, Committee Chair; Marsha Orgeron, Committee Member; Jon Thompson, Committee Member
    "Fascinated Victims:" Aspects of Abjection in the Films of David Cronenberg" traces the intersections between Julia Kristeva's theory of the abjection and the films of David Cronenberg. While this pairing has been the center of critical attention for some time, remarkably little attention has been paid to the specifically cinematic production and presentation of abjection in Cronenberg's work. "Fascinated Victims" hopes to mine this territory and, in so doing, it aims to foreground more generally the cinematic medium's proclivity for the abject. The primary means of analysis will be close reading of a number of key Cronenberg films, with particular attention paid to the various means through which abjection is produced. Occasional reference will be made to Cronenberg's responses to his films, and to their critical and theoretical surroundings. Although critical consensus seems to be that Cronenberg's use of the abject serves to make women monstrous, the present work will shift that focus for the figure of abjection to those forces, cinematically and diegetically, who are responsible for the process of abject-ing. Chapter 1 provides a survey of the critical literature regarding abjection in Cronenberg's films. Critics treat Cronenberg's films with little reference to his specifically cinematic tools, and find abjection in specific abject "objects," like the parasites of Shivers (1975). The critical failure to discuss Cronenberg in cinematic terms, to analyze the particular effects the cinematic apparatus might have on our understanding of the abject will be connected to the cinematic representation of the abject, demonstrating the need to explicate abjection in specifically cinematic terms. Chapter 2 examines closely what we might call Cronenberg's abjectifying narrative strategies. Through the use of the subjective point of view and the representation of hallucinations, Cronenberg reinforces the abject images on the screen. Furthermore, by connecting the viewer to a protagonist through the subjective point of view, the boundary between character and viewer is collapsed, producing another form of abjection. Chapter 3 will examine the process of adaptation in light of the abject. Because Cronenberg often adapts material from other media, creating hybrids in a manner that recalls the abject, both Naked Lunch and Crash will be analyzed to understand how their status as adaptations reinforce the abject produced by other cinematic means. The adaptation, by fusing media, elides the boundary between cinematic author/text and literary author/text, which recalls the lack of boundary in the abject. As with narrative techniques, adaptive techniques both reinforce the abject on the screen, while producing their own brand of abjection. The conclusion will discuss the use of the abject in the context, of Cronenberg's — and his critics' — attitude toward gender. Because Cronenberg's early films often feature monstrous women, while his later films see a transition to almost exclusively masculine monsters, the issue of gender is central to the use of abjection in Cronenberg's films, and to the wider question of his misogyny. With an understanding of the specifically cinematic means through which Cronenberg represents the abject, the charges of misogyny that critics have leveled at the director will be evaluated.
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    Half a Woman: The Nun in Film from WWII to the Present
    (2005-12-06) Krocker, Sarah Elizabeth; Maria Pramaggiore, Committee Chair; Marsha Orgeron, Committee Member; Thomas Lisk, Committee Member
    Half a Woman examines how six prominent nun films signify the changing perception of the nun in postwar America and Great Britain. Through the changing perspective of the populace, as well as historical influences such as the Feminist Movement, the nun has shifted from the angelic entity of the mid-1940s in The Bells of St. Mary's (1945) and Lilies of the Field (1963) to the sexual demon of the 1970s and 1980s with The Devils (1971). After the 1980s, the nun was not only a sexual demon but a platform for political commentary. Agnes of God (1983), Dead Man Walking (1995), and The Magdalene Sisters (2002) all use the nun to express a political stance on topics affecting women, as well as society at the turn of the 21st century.

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