The Estranged World: The Grotesque in Sofia Coppola's Young Girls Trilogy

dc.contributor.advisorLavery, Daviden_US
dc.contributor.authorGraves, Stephanie A.en_US
dc.contributor.committeememberHoltzclaw, Roberten_US
dc.contributor.departmentEnglishen_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-06-02T19:01:56Z
dc.date.available2014-06-02T19:01:56Z
dc.date.issued2014-04-08en_US
dc.description.abstractSteeped in collision and disjuncture, connoting both the grisly and the fantastic, and combining the aberrant and the quotidian, the modern construct of the grotesque synthesizes contradictions. The grotesque is a liminal concept, occupying gaps and existing on the edges, transgressing and destabilizing boundaries. Highly visual, it is a combinatory creature, a means of combining disparate concepts or objects to challenge established hierarchies of order and stability and to create new ambivalently-encoded composites. A common reaction to these grotesque elements is the compulsion to pull away, to avert one's gaze--the grotesque elicits the desire to escape the discomfort it stirs up in us at the same time that it induces fascination and the inability to look away. This sense of unease is a particular element of the grotesque that contemporary auteur Sofia Coppola exploits in her films in order to elicit specific emotional responses to her subject matter.en_US
dc.description.abstractCoppola's first three films--<italic>The Virgin Suicides</italic> (1999),<italic> Lost in Translation</italic> (2003), and <italic>Marie Antoinette</italic> (2006)--form a loose trilogy that is thematically related by an interest in what constitutes femininity and how representations of women are socially constructed. A close reading of these films considers the conflation of the female body with the grotesque and the manner in which the transgressive, dislocating, liminal aspects of the grotesque inform Coppola's construction of the female experience. Coppola's work repeatedly foregrounds the inherent correlation of the grotesque with the conception and category of the feminine by considering the interiority of her female characters in opposition to the social constructs surrounding and circumscribing them. "The grotesque is the estranged world," writes Wolfgang Kayser, and Coppola's films are tremendously interested in this liminal, alienated world and characters that find themselves at divisive points in their lives within this disorienting context.en_US
dc.description.degreeM.A.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://jewlscholar.mtsu.edu/handle/mtsu/3655
dc.publisherMiddle Tennessee State Universityen_US
dc.subjectGrotesqueen_US
dc.subjectLiminalityen_US
dc.subjectLost in Translationen_US
dc.subjectMarie Antoinetteen_US
dc.subjectSofia Coppolaen_US
dc.subjectThe Virgin Suicidesen_US
dc.subject.umiFilm studiesen_US
dc.thesis.degreegrantorMiddle Tennessee State Universityen_US
dc.thesis.degreelevelMastersen_US
dc.titleThe Estranged World: The Grotesque in Sofia Coppola's Young Girls Trilogyen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US

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