Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 July 2009
Film studies is, and has been, deeply involved with cultural categories of explanation. Features of cinema, such as the shot/reverse-shot series, are explicated in terms of ideology and the propagation of a socially determined dominant discourse. The viewer's involvement with cinema has also tended to be framed in terms of culturally construed models of psychology, such as psychoanalysis. I refer to psychoanalysis as culturally construed for two reasons. The first involves the conditions of its origin: Freud as a late Romantic philosopher/scientist whose brilliant work is not separable from the parameters of the bourgeois, patriarchal era in which he lived, and whose project was to substitute a new paradigmatic ideal – the self, the psyche – for those previously holding sway in Western culture. Philip Rieff describes this as the replacement of religion, politics, and economics by “psychological man” (356–57).
Psychoanalysis has also operated within the arena of film studies to advance certain large-scale analyses of cinema's cultural impact, viewed in terms of the mobilization of desire within the medium's mass audiences. Since the 1970s, film studies' appropriation of psychoanalysis has been tied to the efforts of film scholars to explain how cinema connects desire (at the level of individual viewers) to ideology (at the level of social discourse). Allied with the ideological study of cinema found in Marxist or feminist approaches, psychoanalysis has provided film scholars with a method for connecting cinema's operations to the individual spectator as well as to social formations.
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