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Holding My Own in No Man's Land: Women and Men and Film and Feminists
 
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Holding My Own in No Man's Land: Women and Men and Film and Feminists [Hardcover]

Molly Haskell (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 30, 1997
Molly Haskell, one of America's leading film critics, has been delighting readers for decades with her intelligence and insight. Her landmark book, From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies, praised for its "wit and style" and called "a valuable contribution to film scholarship," is still considered among the most stimulating and important books on the subject of women and film. In Holding My Own in No Man's Land, a series of pieces written in the twenty years since the publication of From Reverence to Rape, Haskell once again explores the relationship between women and men, and between the movies and those who watch them.
Haskell remains a controversial figure in both feminist and film circles, accused of "uncritically celebrating heterosexual romance"--a charge to which Haskell cheerfully pleads guilty. Holding My Own In No Man's Land challenges the conventional feminist wisdom that the classic films of the Thirties, Forties, and Fifties were made by a male-dominated industry which reduced women to objects of the "male gaze." Instead, she says that women were better served by the notoriously tyrannical studio system than they are in the "newer, freer, hipper Hollywood of the present." A fascinating interview with Doris Day points out that, despite her current image as a symbol of all that was repressive about the suburban Fifties, she played a series of roles as--and was herself--a successful career woman who worked because she enjoyed it. In another perceptive portrait, Haskell describes the mesmerizing power the sultry, self-parodying sex symbol Mae West had on screen, and the financial clout she had off screen. And she writes about Howard Hawks's screwball comedies, such as His Girl Friday and Man's Favorite Sport from the Thirties, where assertive women were equal to men, and more than held their own in the battle of the sexes.
Holding My Own in No Man's Land ranges from interviews with Hollywood legends such as Gloria Swanson and John Wayne, to celebrations of the comic verve of Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett, to ruminations on literary figures such as Truman Capote and his Holly Golightly, and Jane Austen's Emma. We learn that the cleaning woman of The Carol Burnett Show logo was a reminder of the days when Burnett and her grandmother, "out of spoons and relief money," worked nights as cleaning women in the Warner executive offices. We see Meryl Streep "hiding in the spotlight" in a refreshingly skeptical analysis of Streep's determination to be an actress rather than a star. Finally, Haskell closes with a wickedly funny section on recent fashion and style, including pieces on "Lipstick Envy" and "Nude With Attitude."
Haskell describes Holding My Own in No Man's Land as "a kind of continuing set of ruminations, encounters, insights, and images of people and characters who have had an influence on our lives." With wit and style she illuminates the hopes and fears we project onto these larger-than-life figures-- the grand dames, the stoic heroes, the dueling couples--and the lessons we learned from them about how to fall in love, how to act as adults, and how to live in this complex world.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Noted film critic and essayist Molly Haskell has assembled some of her finest articles of the past 20 years into a cohesive collection focusing on the roles women play on film and in the film business. Holding My Own in No Man's Land features essays on Mae West, Marlene Dietrich, Doris Day, and other actresses; thoughtful pieces on literary characters such as Jane Austen's Emma; and a section entitled "Guys," which features a profile of Truman Capote and a surprising and thoughtful essay based on an interview with John Wayne. As one of America's finest writers on film, Haskell's collection of essays is a must for those who regard film as something worth thinking about.

From Publishers Weekly

The author of the film studies classic From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies collects a grab bag of pieces written over the last 20 years. They are occasionally interesting, but almost always superficial and, despite the subtitle, exhibit little unity of theme. Haskell isn't always intellectually rigorous, often lapsing into straight recounting of scenes or facts without much analysis. The initial section, "Dames," provides profiles of several actresses, director Lina Wertmuller and two Howard Hawks heroines. Some of these pieces, such as the one on Meryl Streep that gushes "Her talent is the stuff of legend," are merely admiring puff pieces, and the essay on Wertmuller seems self-serving and unnecessarily catty (when Wertmuller points to the author's boots as an example of a luxury, she wonders "because I am a 'rich capitalist bitch'? ...Or because I am going home to write what may be her only unfavorable review in New York?"). But Haskell also surprises with a successful reconsiderationof Doris Day, which points out that, despite her reputation as a sugar-sweet virgin, Day's characters were always employed in "excellent positions." Three literary essays are cogent, but they seem out-of-place and the remaining essays skip around from John Wayne to Truman Capote and make-up. Haskell ends with an essay on female comedians on television that reads like a laundry list of current stars and offers tired observations like "There's a spectrum of women comedians, ranging from the Nice Girls (Ellen De Generes, Helen Hunt, Cybill Shepherd) to the Furies, with various forms of survivors in between."
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 216 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (January 30, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195053095
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195053098
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #819,068 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wit and insight about John Wayne, Doris Day, Lucille Ball, makeup and much more!, June 16, 2006
By 
Bruce Vogt (British Columbia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Holding My Own in No Man's Land: Women and Men and Film and Feminists (Hardcover)
Molly Haskell is NOT a reviewer. She is a wonderful social critic whose feminism informs rather than limits the range of insights she brings to her subjects. Most of the subjects - but not all - have to do with women in movies and television: how they are depicted, the roles available etc. But in this wide-ranging collection, she also discusses makeup, rape fantasies, nudity and the new take-no-prisoners TV female comedians - among other things!

For a more thorough treatment of Women in Film, her book From Reverence to Rape is indispensable. But this collection allows her to ponder a wider range of subject. For those who really love film and popular art and are interested in the assumptions behind so much of our popular culture, this book will delight.
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1 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Haskell couldn't review her way out of a wet paper bag, April 3, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Holding My Own in No Man's Land: Women and Men and Film and Feminists (Hardcover)
I have trouble suppressing a chuckle at the ponderous, self-important titles of Haskell's review books. Despite the grandiosity of the title of this one--"Women and Men and Film and Feminists": oh, is that all? Just those?--this book is not much more than simple recounting of the casts and the plots of movies she likes. You can probably get more critical information on the Lifetime or Oxygen websites. It's like she's turning film criticism into a parody of the institution itself. It's kind of sad that real feminist film critique has to be lumped in with this "Dear Diary / Love Molly" pablum. Oh, well. Maybe that means I can get *my* diary published!
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