What Makes The Titanic Objectified?

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James Cameron’s motion picture Titanic blew the crowds away when it was first released in 1997, and its success has echoed into contemporary film society. Due to this movie actress Kate Winslet got her huge breakthrough, which allowed her to become one of the most celebrated film stars of our time. Winslets character, Rose DeWitt Bukater, a beautiful upper-class girl who is unimpressed with the luxuries she is surrounded with, becomes the love interest of the penniless Jack Dawson during the maiden voyage of the Titanic. Among the many plotlines of Titanic, it is their impossible love story that is the most central, a conflict that is based on her being of higher social stature. This essay focuses on examining how the way women are portrayed as being unattainable may reinforce their objectification and further fuel a desire to possess them. The sequence I have chosen is that when the audience is first acquainted with Rose, as, while it is aligned with a classical presentation of a female …show more content…

This in turn develops a sense of longing to attain her qualities, either by conquering her or fashioning yourself in her image. Laura Mulvey discusses the phenomenon in her essay and uses the terms scopophilia, the pleasure of looking at another person as an erotic object and ego libido, a form of identification process to describe the two types of looking. In addition, the desire to possess Rose as an objectified woman is also based in the primal human phenomenon of wanting what you cannot have. Her unattainability presents a chase which, if succeeded, would produce a sense of symbolic power, due to the fact that the harder the chase, the sweeter the conquer. In conclusion, to portray a female as unavailable enhances the want to own her by playing the strings of visual pleasure and human

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