Woman Interrupted: A Foucauldian Reading of Gender, Madness, and Power in the Movies Girl, Interrupted and Unsane

Authors

  • Wassim Rebiai University of Jordan
  • Barkuzar Dubbati University of Jordan
  • Hala Abu Taleb University of Jordan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1402.21

Keywords:

gender, movies, medical gaze, Foucault

Abstract

This article presents a Foucauldian reading of the movies Girl, Interrupted (1999) and Unsane (2018) which deal with women in psychiatric institutions. Building on Foucault’s conceptualization of asylums, the medical gaze, and confinement as a paradigm of power, the researchers study the female protagonists in the two movies as characters struggling with psychological issues stemming from their rejection of gender normativity. The experiences of Susanna and Sawyer in asylums are a reflection of a larger struggle against social expectations and sexual norms.

Author Biographies

Wassim Rebiai, University of Jordan

Department of English Language and Literature

Barkuzar Dubbati, University of Jordan

Department of English Language and Literature

Hala Abu Taleb, University of Jordan

Department of English Language and Literature

References

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Published

2024-02-01

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Articles