t
Camelia Elias
self and other
self and an imaginary self which merges with the fictionalized feminine subject
the recognition of a potential self in the fictionalized situation
the desire to maintain the difference between self and ideal
“Identification can only be made through recognition, and all recognition is itself an implicit confirmation of an existing form. The institutional sanction of stars as ego ideals also operates to establish normative figures.
Identification enforces a collapse of the subject onto the normative demand for sameness, which under patriarchy is always male” (Anne
Friedberg: “Identification and the star – a refusal of difference”, 1982)
Identification reproduces:
Sameness
Fixity
The confirmation of existing identities
“Identification has been seen as the feminine counterpoint to masculine desire”
(Stacey)
devotion
adoration
worship
transcendence
aspiration and inspiration
stars serve as
role models
someone to emulate
the epitome of what a woman should be
ideals of feminine appearance
distinct relations between self and ideal
denial of self in favor of praising screen goddesses
the desire to transform the self
pretending
resembling
imitating
copying
“desire involves wanting to ‘have’ and identification involves wanting to ‘be’
(Stacey, 158)
Nettie
Celie
Pa
Mr___/ Albert
Harpo/Sofia
Shug Avery
Samuel
Corinne
Olivia
Adam; Tashi
No surnames
Walker draws attention to her examination of male dominance
by withholding men’s surnames she diminishes their patriarchal authority
Celie is proving herself to be a pathetic character: she should stand up to Mister and fight back.
Sophia’s experiences show that fighting back doesn’t work
Shug Avery appears to be a source of strength and goodness in the film/novel
there are no good relationships between men and women in The Color Purple
they are all based on violence, abuse, mistrust, and contempt
the women are the strong ones and the men are the weak ones
“You better not never tell nobody but God”
(Pa)
“You can’t curse nobody. Look at you. You black, you pore, you ugly, you a woman.
Goddamn, you nothing at all…” (Albert)
Celie with Shug
Celie with Nettie
Albert with Shug
Harpo with Sofia
Albert with Celie
affirmation and rejection of the Christian doctrine
“it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don’t notice it” (Shug)
(re-entering the symbolic law of the father, mainly in Spielberg, less in Walker)
“I learned that a certain Mrs. Green had objected to her daughter, Donna, reading The Color Purple.” (Coming in from the Cold, Alice Walker, 1984)
a controversial book since its publication.
grounds for objections:
the language is offensive
black people don’t speak like that
black men are presented negatively as brutal, sexist, selfish
the book is too sexually explicit: it sets a bad example to young people
there is very poor use of English, which also sets a bad example
“If you are not free to express your love, you are a slave; and anyone who would demand that you enslave yourself by not expressing your love, is a person with a slaveholder’s mentality”
“In the Closet of the Soul,” Alice Walker, 1986)