Redirecting the Gaze
Gender, Theory, and Cinema in the Third World
Edited by Diana Robin and Ira Jaffe
Average rating:
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
Your rating: -
Book Presentation:
Examines the work and aspirations of women filmmakers in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, as well as in marginalized communities within the United States, with particular attention to issues of gender, race, nation, and aesthetics.
Redirecting the Gaze is primarily concerned with the cinematic portrayals of women by women directors working outside corporate America and Europe. The book examines cinematic works of the 1980s and 1990s by women filmmakers from Argentina, Bolivia, China, Cuba, India, Mexico, Senegal, Tanzania, and Venezuela, as well as by independent Black American and Chicano women, most of whom are scarcely known in the United States and Europe.
About the authors:
At the University of New Mexico Diana Robin is Professor of Classics and Director of Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, and Ira Jaffe is Professor of Film and Head of Media Arts. Robin is the author of Filelfo in Milan: Writings, 1451–1477 and editor and translator of Collected Letters of a Renaissance Feminist, by Laura Cereta.
Press Reviews:
"This book provides a broad spectrum of essays on the phenomenon of Third Cinema, including considerations of directors and cinema in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. For anyone looking for an introduction to the theory of Third Cinema and for an overview of films in this area, this is an invaluable work. Redirecting the Gaze is a must-read for any upper-level class in oppositional cinema studies. Many of the essays include historical overviews of the national cinema of specific Third World countries in addition to consideration of a particular director's work. " — John Hazlett, University of New Orleans
"This is a stunning book. A major accomplishment; the breadth of scholarship in this essential area of cinema is comprehensive and superbly organized. It is engaging and groundbreaking. It combines a number of different approaches to exciting new material, and includes rare interviews and rigorous critical investigations. The chapter on the Bolivian cinema is, in particular, utterly new and refreshing. " — Gwendolyn Foster, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
"Redirecting the Gaze provides valuable insights into an important body of films. It emphasizes the importance of the films and their filmmakers within the specific contexts in which they were produced. By mobilizing historical, cultural, and contextual-specific approaches to women's filmmaking, it opens up space for a more inclusive theorization of feminist filmmaking and feminist film theory. " — Zuzana M. Pick, Carleton University
See the publisher website: State University of New York Press
> From the same authors:
> On a related topic:
Film Studies (2002)
Women in Contemporary World Cinema
Gendering the Nation (1999)
Canadian Women's Cinema
by Kay Armatage, Kass Banning, Brenda Longfellow and Janine Marchessault
Military Women in World Cinema (2023)
A 20th Century History and Filmography
by Deborah A. Deacon and Stacy Fowler
Subject: On Films > Characters
Cinema Today (2010)
A Conversation with Thirty-nine Filmmakers from around the World
by Elena Oumano
Subject: Director
Creative Hustling (2023)
Women Making and Distributing Films from Nairobi