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The Changing Representations Of Women : The Art Of Hannah Wilke, Lynda Benglis, And Cindy Sherman

Satisfactory Essays

In Jessica Holt’s “The Changing Representations of Women: The Art of Hannah Wilke, Lynda Benglis, and Cindy Sherman,” “S.O.S” served to attack societies popular images of women in the media. Wilkes way of presenting her body addresses what is perceived and encouraged as feminine in the phallocratic society. Holt states that by representing the scars on Wilkes body with specifically female genitalia she emphasizes the harmful stigma, which surrounds the idea of being a women; objectified and commoditized by the dominant male influence as an object of his desire. Wilke acknowledges this objectification of women however she simultaneously mocks societies definition of “female” as ridiculous, as seen in her dramatized poses. Wilke stated: “I chose gum because it’s the perfect metaphor for the American woman, chew her up, get what you want out of her, throw her out and pop in a new piece” (Holt, 7). In Jennifer Linton’s essay: “Feminist Narcissism and the Reclamation of the Erotic Body” there is a focus on the publics rejection and attack of Wilke for reinforcing the objectification of women by partaking in narcissistic “self-love” (Linton) and self-exposure, asserting the idea that women are meant to be exposed and not to make the conscientious decision to expose themselves. Women are represented as passive and reserved, and when they empower and reclaim themselves by taking control over their own bodies this causes a disruption in the phallocratic

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