ABSTRACT

The femme fatale occupies a precarious yet highly visible space in contemporary cinema. From sci-fi alien women to teenage bad girls, filmmakers continue to draw on the notion of the sexy deadly woman in ways which traverse boundaries of genre and narrative. This book charts the articulations of the femme fatale in American cinema of the past twenty years, and contends that, despite her problematic relationship with feminism, she offers a vital means for reading the connections between mainstream cinema and representations of female agency. The films discussed raise questions about the limits and potential of positioning women who meet highly normative standards of beauty as powerful icons of female agency. They point towards the constant shifting between patriarchal appropriation and feminist recuperation that inevitably accompanies such representations within mainstream media contexts.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

part I|35 pages

Retro

chapter 1|17 pages

The Femme Fatale Who Wasn’t There

Retro Noir’s Glamorous Ghosts

chapter 2|16 pages

Dead Girls on Film

Retro Noir and the Corpse of the Femme Fatale

part II|35 pages

Girls

chapter 3|17 pages

Bad Girls Don’t Cry?

Desire, Punishment and Girls in Crisis

chapter 4|16 pages

Getting Away with It

Postfeminism and the Victorious Girl

part III|36 pages

Bisexuality

chapter 5|17 pages

Bisexual Detection

Visibility, Epistemology and Contamination

chapter 6|17 pages

Bisexual Fragmentation

Failures of Representation

part IV|34 pages

Monstrosity

chapter 7|17 pages

Bodies of Evidence

Possession, Science and the Separation of Power

chapter 8|15 pages

Bodies without Origins

Beyond the Myth of the Original Woman

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion