Impotence, Nostalgia, and Objectification: Patriarchal Visual Rhetoric to Contain Women

  • Elizabeth Brunner University of Utah

Abstract

Patriarchal visual rhetoric of containment, evident in contemporary media portrayals, particularly of women, systemically and institutionally oppresses women. How can women break free from the structures that restrict them? One strategy that I explore in this essay is an oppositional reading of the visual codes of containment that operate in the mass media to limit the power of non-dominant groups and attempt to force them into the strict structure of a hegemonic system. Containment visual rhetoric taps into deep-seated fears and hegemonic ideologies, including the fear that the rise of women to more powerful positions in the work force may ultimately result in the disruption or even inversion of patriarchy. From an analytic lens of visual codes of containment, I use an oppositional reading of images produced for Esquire Magazine in order to uncover ideologies of power and to discuss rhetorical strategies within patriarchal ideology intended to contain women from appearing to have agency in public spheres of influence. These three strategies are mythological impotence, cultural nostalgia, and the objectifying gaze.

Author Biography

Elizabeth Brunner, University of Utah

Elizabeth Brunner, M.F.A., M.A., is an artist and Ph.D. student at the University of Utah (UT) and a 2013-14 UT Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellow. Since 2003, she has taught undergraduate courses in art, art history, and communication at UT. Brunner has exhibited her artwork in a number of galleries in the Midwest and presented her research at national and international conferences. Her current scholarship continues to examine visual rhetoric and matrices of power, but within the areas of new media and activism in China. She can be reached at betsyabrunner@gmail.com

Published
2013-10-01
How to Cite
BRUNNER, Elizabeth. Impotence, Nostalgia, and Objectification: Patriarchal Visual Rhetoric to Contain Women. Visual Culture & Gender, [S.l.], v. 8, p. 31-45, oct. 2013. ISSN 1936-1912. Available at: <http://vcg.emitto.net/index.php/vcg/article/view/73>. Date accessed: 07 may 2024.
Section
Articles