: The tension between identifying with the powerful male hero on screen (narcissism) and the pleasure derived from looking at the female character (scopophilia).
: This detailed summary on Climber connects Mulvey's 1975 theories to current media trends, discussing how diverse platforms today either challenge or reinforce power dynamics and representation.
Here are a few insightful blog posts and resources that explore these themes: Visual and Other Pleasures
: The idea that the camera (and the audience) views the world and women from a masculine, heterosexual point of view.
: How women in film are often presented as passive objects for the erotic pleasure of the male protagonist and the spectator. : The tension between identifying with the powerful
: This post on That Film and Game Blog provides a modern look at how Mulvey's concepts of the male gaze and scopophilia (the pleasure of looking) still resonate—and are criticized—in today’s academic landscape.
“Visual Pleasures and Narrative Cinema” « Degree Project : How women in film are often presented
: For a more theoretical breakdown, the post at Circle, Uncoiled examines how Mulvey uses psychoanalytic theory as a "political weapon" to demonstrate how patriarchal structures are built into the very form of cinema.