Thursday, 17 December 2015

Lacan and the Mirror Stage

Lacan's theory of the mirror stage is based around t=an infants fascination with its own image in a mirror. When an infant is younger than 12 months, it does not recognise the image of the mirror is itself, much like many animals. As the infant grows slightly older (around 12-15 months) it recognises that it is its own self in the mirror.



Lacan theorised that the infant develops a rivalry with its own reflection, seeing it as a whole human, where as the infant itself is still undeveloped - fragmented in ways the reflection is whole. He theorised further, the only way the infant resolves its resentment towards the image is to identify and become one with it.

This theory is applied to film in that women are exposed to women in an idealised way "perfect women" for men. The female moviegoers internalise the distorted representation of women as an ideal they should strive towards and become one with, like the infant.
This theory corresponds with the "male gaze" theory, as the idea of a perfect woman in film caters to male filmgoers expectations and is catered toward them.

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