Dear Colleagues

Some of you might be interested in my new monograph which has just been published by Routledge (https://www.amazon.com/Fatale-Contemporary-Cinema-Routledge-Feminism/dp/1138586447)

with amazing endorsements from Lucy Bolton, Elizabeth Cowie, Davina Quinlivan and Emma Wilson.  Here they are:

‘In a series of highly thought-provoking film analyses Agnieszka Piotrowska re-writes the femme fatale as a ‘nasty woman’ who is a danger not just to men but also to cinema’s notion of woman. The figure of Antigone is central to her account of a feminine agency that does not give up on her desire but which is also not simply a matter of revenge. Instead Piotrowska shows how each film demonstrates the entanglement of drive and desire, of sex and violence in being a feminine subject. The Nasty Woman looks awry at the films it discusses, exposing their paradoxical subversion of both cinema’s and feminism’s binaries in writing that is highly engaging as both scholarly and personal.’ Elizabeth Cowie, Professor Emeritus, Film Studies University of Kent, UK

‘This is a brave and compelling book. Filmmaker and interdisciplinary scholar, Agnieszka Piotrowska, introduces the notion of the "nasty woman" into film scholarship, brilliantly updating discussions of the femme fatale, and looking afresh at female subjectivity, power and erotic energy. In writing that is gritty, lively, and sometimes personal, partial and sensitive, Piotrowska engages with debates about #metoo, and feminist killjoys, as she also looks back to Antigone to think through ways of not giving up on one’s desire.’ Emma Wilson, Professor of French Literature and the Visual Arts, University of Cambridge, UK

‘In this volume, Piotrowska has named a new cinematic archetype. The "nasty woman", written by a woman, directed by a woman, harks back to Antigone and Medusa, and draws on the femme fatale, but is a thoroughly modern model for our times. Drawing on feminist theory and psychoanalysis, this timely intervention in film theory tackles women whom we don’t have to like, but about whom we want to know more about.’Lucy Bolton, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, Queen Mary University of London, UK

‘This book offers up a timely, incisive analysis of the representation of 'bad' women in contemporary cinema -- those whose moral choices and troubling, embodied actions mark an ethical shift in our current contemporary climate. Framed through a direct reference to Donald Trump's referral to his political rival, Hilary Clinton, as a 'nasty woman', Piotrowska carefully re-examines seminal films such as Arnold's Red Road and Polley's The Stories We Tell, drawing on a range of theoretical contexts from Lacanian theory to Laura Marks.’ Davina Quinlivan, Senior Lecturer in Performance and Screen Studies, Kingston University, UK

Very best wishes

Agnieszka

Senior Fellow of Higher Education Academy

https://agnieszka-piotrowska.com/

BAFTSS Board Member 

 http://www.baftss.org



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