Thursday, January 23, 2020
A Psychoanalytic Analysis of Pretty Woman Essay -- Movie Film Essays
A Psychoanalytic Analysis of Pretty Woman In the introduction to his book, The Sublime Object of Ideology, Slavoj Zizek acquaints readers with his bookââ¬â¢s tripartite aim. He plans, among other things, to illustrate concepts fundamental to Lacanian psychoanalysis ââ¬â an intention which will serve to further his more ambitious goal ââ¬Å"to reactualize Hegelian dialectics by giving it a new readingâ⬠in the light of Lacanian psychoanalysis ââ¬â and ââ¬Å"to contribute to the theory of ideology via a new reading of some well-known classical motifsâ⬠(7). In this broad category of classical motifs associated with the theory of ideology, I have isolated both fetishism and the commodity-form and intend to briefly illustrate some of these concepts against the backdrop of the movie Pretty Woman -- a popular rags-to-riches romantic comedy from 1990. Looking through the prism of Lacan and Marx, Zizek brands us as ââ¬Å"fetishists in practice, not in theoryâ⬠; he posits that we ââ¬Å"do not knowâ⬠or we ââ¬Å"misrecognizeâ⬠the fact that in our ââ¬Å"social reality itself, in [our] social activity ââ¬â in the act of commodity exchange ââ¬â [we] are guided by the fetishistic illusionâ⬠(31). Amidst this discussion on ideology, Zizek highlights one of the most significant differences between Marx and Lacan: In the predominant Marxist perspective the ideological gaze is a partial gaze overlooking the totality of social relations, whereas in the Lacanian perspective ideology rather designates a totality set on effacing the traces of its own impossibility. (49) This difference corresponds to the one that distinguishes the Marxian from the Freudian notion of fetishism: In the former, ââ¬Å"a fetish conceals the positive network of social relations,â⬠whereas in the latter ââ¬Å"a fet... ...difficult to let go of something so beautiful.â⬠The movie is jam-packed full of such desirable ââ¬Å"somethingsâ⬠-- potentially fetishized objects which characters use in an effort to compensate for a ââ¬Å"lackâ⬠in their lives: cash, a silver Lotus, clothes from Rodeo Drive, a personal jet, the ââ¬Å"killâ⬠of a hostile takeover, or the company of a beautiful woman. In the movie's conclusion, Edward does go through with the jewelry-return; he does not leave behind the ruby-haired Vivian, though, and the audience receives their ââ¬Å"happy endingâ⬠ââ¬â perhaps a fetish in its own right. Works Cited: The Internet Movie Database Ltd. (An Amazon.com company.) http://us.imdb.com [Accessed 11 November 1998]. Pretty Woman. Dir. Garry Marshall. With Richard Gere and Julia Roberts. Touchstone, 1990. Zizek, Slavoj. The Sublime Object of Ideology. London: Verso, 1989.
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