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A study of female aggression as represented in Patty Jenkins' fiction film Monster

The film Monster (USA, 2003) is based on the life of Aileen Wuornos, the Florida
prostitute who was one of the few documented female serial killers in the United
States. The scriptwriter and director of the film, Patty Jenkins, surprisingly centered
the film on a love story, instead of assuming the role of judge or advocate towards the
actions of Wuornos. After a flash back sequence that recreates the childhood of Lee
(Charlize Theron), the film opens as Lee meets Selby (Christina Ricci), a young and
immature lesbian in a bar. Lee responds very rudely and defensively to the clumsy
flirtation of Selby, as she does not think of herself as gay and her life as a prostitute
has made her very hostile towards society. However, Lee opens up to Selby, as she
perceives her as her last chance to find Love. Patty Jenkins cinematically evokes
Lee’s hopelessness and despair before meeting Selby in order to emphasize the
importance of this same-sex relationship. For Lee, Selby is the innocent child that she
has to protect and save, a symbol of the child she once was herself. Inspired, she goes
out to work on the highway to earn money for their first date, and a client beats her
unconscious, ties her up, rapes her with a tyre iron and pours petrol over her. Fearing
for her life, Lee shoots him, and then takes his car and wallet. As her relationship with
Selby develops, she enters into the role of provider and protector. After her brutal
encounter, she is scared of the streets and makes an attempt to go straight. However,
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in her attempt to look for a proper job she encounters social rejection and
brutalization. Pressurized by her new girlfriend to provide money, Lee goes back to
prostitution. However, her last traumatic experience with the rapist john makes her
believe that all her clients might turn out to be abusive, which provokes in her a desire
for revenge and killing. Unable to stop, she robs her victims to provide for her
girlfriend and believes that she can identify which clients deserve to die. After the
killing of an innocent man, she is turned over to the police by Selby. Monster is not
about sensationalism, but rather portrays the intimate tragic story of a human being
who became a serial killer, due to a combination of bad social and personal
pathologies. The Meaning of the Form:
The aim of this thesis is to explore the representation of women and aggression in
Patty Jenkins’ film Monster. I will argue that, while the female characters in Monster
do not escape the conventional portrayal of women within the dominant Hollywood
cinema, their portrayal does nonetheless create a ‘non-normative’ representation. By
exploiting the classical narrative and a particular model of representation of women,
Jenkins creates a cinematic text which attacks the patriarchal principles grounding the
model. Therefore, the main argument of this thesis will be that Jenkins uses the
Hollywood system of narration and representation of women in order to subvert and
criticize it. Ultimately she is using the film as means to critique the patriarchal
violence within American society itself. In order to substantiate my argument, I will first look at the conventional
representation of women in fiction-film genre1, and will then investigate how the
performance of aggression is constructed within the film. The film represents
aggression as a social phenomenon that develops into a pathological behavior. By
establishing the history of the general phenomenon of female aggression, I will
examine its specific representation in my film case study Monster. Although the film
introduces different female characters that each have their particular expression of
aggression and representation, the primary focus of analysis will be Lee, the main
character of the film.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/5885
Date10 December 2008
CreatorsPaneva, Iva
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf

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