Publication: Rewriting Girlhood. Ambiguous Bodies in Contemporary American Visual Arts: Sally Mann’s At Twelve
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University of Bucharest
Abstract
Drawing on cultural studies, gender theories, feminist theories, visual
culture and semiotics, the present study investigates the subversive ways in
which particular visual representations of teenage bodies introduce the generic
transgression of cultural boundaries and limits in order to reflect the process of
identity formation. Departing from various theories of corporeality and the
semiotics of the body as a cultural entity, this study looks at contemporary
American photographer Sally Mann’s collection of photographs, At Twelve, in
order to discern the visual mechanisms through which the staged representation
of adolescent girls introduces the generous subversion of generic normative
categories such as gender, age or social status. Furthermore, the present analysis
suggests that trespassing boundaries is a necessary stage in the construction of
self-sustainable identities in the aftermath of-postmodernism. Thus, the article
tackles gender construction as a cultural edifice in which visual representation
plays a significant part. Sally Mann’s photography is eventually viewed as an
instance of the contemporary interrogation of norms and boundaries of classical
Western culture, as well as an innovative visual documenting of the
transgressions, transitions and avoidance of limits that characterize adolescence.
