Abstract

The article considers an iconic proponent of embodied, professionally mediated repetition, examining the transnational typology of the telegenic media ‘hostess’ through a close reading of the author/artist’s video artwork Ovation. It provides a description of one feminist artist’s approach to fighting the feminised automaton on its constrained, patriarchal terms, while engaging with the potential pitfalls of such an approach as outlined by Rey Chow in Writing Diaspora. It proposes a metaphoric framework of the performative undead to break the methodological deadlock implicit in post-colonial critiques of mimesis and ‘remimesis’. Co-opting elements of hostesses’ obsessive and hegemonic image-making to affectively reinform the viewer about the particular conditions of this public and ubiquitous form of gendered labour, the artwork and critical analysis intertwine to argue away from the freshness of radical narcissism and towards a performative epistemology of radically enacted, temporal, ideological decay. The article/artwork also makes an experimental case for delegated repetitive labour and, in the case of the onscreen hostess, repetitive consumption, as potentially politically recuperative for the performer.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call