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				First published: November 1, 2023 - Last updated: November 1, 2023
			TITLE INFORMATION 
			
			Author: Vesi Vuković
			
 Title: Cinematic Suicide
 
 Subtitle: Representations of Working Women in Yugoslav New Film
 
 Journal: Apparatus: Film, Media and Digital Cultures in Central and Eastern Europe
 
 Volume: -
 
 Issue: 9
 
 Year: 2019
 
 Pages: 19 pages (PDF)
 
 eISSN: 2365-7758 - 
					Find a Library: WorldCat
 
 Language: English
 
 Keywords: 
				Modern History: 
					20th Century | 
				European History: 
					Serbian History | 
				Cases: 
					Fictional Victims / 
						Vera, 
						Dragan; 
				Types: 
					Rape / 
						Gang Rape; 
				Victims: 
					Reactions / 
						Suicide; 
				Representations: 
					Films / 
						Bube u glavi
 
 FULL TEXT
 
			
			Links:
			- Apparatus (Free Access)
 
 - ResearchGate (Free Access)
 
 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
			
			Author:
				Academia.edu, 
				ResearchGate
			
 Abstract: 
				»In this article, I investigate representations of suicide committed by working women in Yugoslav New Film. My research question concerns the reasons why female protagonists, potentially empowered through their involvement in the labour force, are eventually disempowered through their suicide in the studied films. Why does the female professional sphere tend to be cinematically portrayed as either a source of peril due to sexual harassment, or a place of the most disappointing experiences? These narratives contradict the socialist discourse of gender equality that encouraged Yugoslav women to seek employment. I look at two case studies from a critical feminist perspective formally analysing them through close reading. Ples v deju/Dance in the Rain (Botjan Hladnik, 1961, Yugoslavia) and Bube u glavi/Bats in the Belfry a.k.a. This Crazy World of Ours a.k.a. Bughouse (Milo 'Mia' Radivojević, 1970, Yugoslavia) both belong to the Yugoslav New Film movement and share a theme of suicide committed by a progressive, working female character, which motivated my choice. The directors render their progressive working heroines vulnerable by transforming the strong women that they are into fragile ones, thus indirectly reflecting male masculinist hostility towards inclusion of women in the workforce. Ultimately, the portrayed suicides of progressive working heroines are a forewarning that a workplace is a dangerous milieu and consequently should be avoided.« 
				(Source: Apparatus)
 
 Contents:
 
			
			
			|  | Abstract |  
			|  | Methods of Suicide |  
			|  | Suicide of Working Women |  
			|  | Memento Mori |  
			|  | Standards of beauty in life |  
			|  | Expectations of beauty in death and fantasy |  
			|  | CCoonncclluussiioon |  
			|  | Acknowledgements |  
			|  | Bio |  
			|  | Funding |  
			|  | Bibliography |  
			|  | Filmography |  Wikipedia: 
 
				History of Europe: 
					History of Serbia / 
						Socialist Republic of Serbia | 
				Film: 
					Cinema of Serbia / 
						Milo Radivojević | 
				Film: 
					Rape in fiction | 
				Sex and the law: 
					Rape / 
						Gang rape
 |