Today’s newsletter was written by Ian Crouch.
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 | Friday, July 14, 2023 | |
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In 1973, the film theorist Laura Mulvey used concepts from psychoanalysis to forge a feminist polemic and a lasting shorthand for gender dynamics onscreen. 
Fifty years after it was first popularized, the concept of “the male gaze,” and the idea that it “projects its fantasy onto the female figure, which is styled accordingly,” has become a central critical trope. In that time, it has also expanded in scope to encompass all manner of seeing: we now speak of the female gaze, the white gaze, the straight gaze, even “the Disney villain gaze.” In a fascinating new essay, published as part of the Therapy Issue, Lauren Michele Jackson returns to the origins of the male gaze to propose fresh ideas about the shifting and uncertain power that is asserted by the viewer, and by those being viewed. “What too often gets elided from current gaze talk is the possibility of looking as an act of ambivalence,” she writes, adding that “no one’s viewpoint—or projection—is entirely secure.” Support The New Yorker’s award-winning journalism. Subscribe today » | |
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Dept. of Self-Care |
On and Off the AvenueSoak and the CityNew Yorkers don’t need wellness culture to sell them on the ancient art of communal bathing. By Rachel Syme |
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 | The Therapy Issue: George Makari on psychiatry after the pandemic; Jia Tolentino on climate panic; cartoons from our archive; and more new pieces publishing all week. Explore the issue » |
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Editor’s Picks |
Persons of InterestKim Hyesoon’s Animal ObsessionsThe Korean poet, now in her fifth decade in the public eye, inhabits a world of knives and carcasses and dark orifices—a fantasia of feminine rage. By E. Tammy Kim |
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Culture DeskHow Far Can Amapiano Go?A new form of South African dance music is thriving. Its performers want the rest of the world to pay attention. By Kelefa Sanneh |
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At the Movies |
The Current CinemaThe Extravagant Treats of “Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part One”In the series’ seventh film, Tom Cruise returns to perform stunts of outsized magnificence. By Anthony Lane |
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The Front Row“Earth Mama” Reinvigorates the Closeup, the Beating Heart of the CinemaSavanah Leaf’s first feature film takes place at a crucial intersection of intimate life and public policy. By Richard Brody |
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Fun & Games Dept. |
CrosswordA Freudian PuzzleA special crossword for this week’s Therapy Issue. The theme: Sometimes . . . By Andy Kravis |
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Name DropPlay Today’s QuizCan you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer? By Will Nediger |
Blitt’s KvetchbookSalvador DalĂ’s Surreal Summer in the CityWhat isn’t melting in this heat? By Barry Blitt |
| Daily ShoutsPardon My French: A Guide to French ColloquialismsHow to speak and think like a French person. By Zoé Albert |
Daily CartoonFriday, July 14thBy Adam Douglas Thompson |
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P.S. “What is it about walking, in particular, that makes it so amenable to thinking and writing?” Ferris Jabr explores the science behind why taking a walk helps us clear our heads—and see things from a new perspective. | |
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Today’s newsletter was written by Ian Crouch. | |
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