We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
It Looks At You
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
23 December 1994

A study of the "returned gaze" from the cinema screen, demonstrating that the films that we watch watch us, guide us, control our gaze, and enforce societal codes
This book is a study of one of the most insidious and pervasive phenomena in the study and reception of cinema: the "returned gaze" from the screen, in which the audience is actually surveilled by the film being projected on the screen. Rather than the usual process of watching a film, in those films which return the gaze of the viewer, the film looks at us, confronting our voyeur's embrace of the spectacle it presents. The book cites examples as diverse as Andy Warhol's Vinyl, Laurel and Hardy two-reel comedies, the films of Jean-Marie Straub, Jean-Luc Godard, Roberto Rossellini, and Wesley E. Barry's Creation of the Humanoids. It also discusses the history of the returned gaze in video, pornography, surveillance systems, and the related plastic arts.
"I think this is a work of both brilliant synthesis and stunning originality." — David Desser, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Chapter One
It Looks at You: The Returned Gaze of Cinema/Video Reception
Chapter Two
Surveillance in the Cinema: The Black Box
Chapter Three
The Trans/Gendered Gaze: The "I" of the Beholder
Chapter Four
The Politics of Desire: Spectacles of the Forbidden
Chapter Five
Dreams of the State: Control of the Spectatorial Body
Chapter Six
The Armed Response: The Screen's Gaze Returned, or the Gorgon's Mirror
Bibliography
Index