Monday, February 7, 2011

My Idea for the Case Study. Big surprise, it has to do with sex.



Hello Everyone!


I decided to use this blog as an outlet to release my idea for our Case Study Project for Cinema and Social Change. Why am I doing this? Well, I'm pretty excited about my topic and I would love everyone's input and ideas.


Here's the Criteria:

You will research, write, and present a case study report about a film and how it inspired social change. Specifically, you will look at the film itself, it's making, it's outreach methods, marketing and distribution plan, and audience reception. You will examine and evaluate the film's performance, effect on an audience, and any actions taken as a result of the film. Your research paper will be 5-7 pages double spaced long. Include a bibliography with at least 5 sources. Present case study to the class with a short clip of the movie, a synopsis of the film, and a discussion of your findings in a 15-20 m

inute presentation. Project will help you familiarize with the film's production, distribution, and reception. Post case study on the blog.


Here's What I Want to Do:

I want to watch the movie Passion and Power: The Technology of O

rgasm. I first watched this film my first year of college when one of my friends had to watch it for her Human Sexuality class. I thought it was fascinating and an interesting topic to explore a little more deeply.


Here's what it's about. This synopsis was found on www.technologyoforgasm.com

This is the story of one simple invention, the vibrator, and its relationship to one complex human behavior, the female orgasm. The history of the vibrator and its medical use had virtually vanished until historian, Rachel Maines, researching needlework patterns in early 20th century women’s magazines, ran across ads for electric vibrators. Piquing her curiosity, she traced the origins of this early electrified appliance and made an astonishing discovery. Under the guise of a medical treatment, Victorian doctors had used vibrators to relieve women of symptoms of hysteria by masturbating them to orgasm. Why did women need this treatment? Female sexual satisfaction was, and continues to be, misunderstood or, worse, ignored. Almost 70% of women do not reach orgasm by penetration alone. Yet, the social, legal and religious definition of “real” sex is just that: penetration of the vagina to MALE orgasm. FEMALE orgasm isn’t even considered. Is it any wonder that a lot of women were unsatisfied? Their dissatisfaction was labeled “hysteria.” Symptoms of hysteria were vague – being cranky, reading French novels while wearing tight corsets, etc. It was a disease manufactured by doctors creating a lucrative clientele and a mutually camouflaged procedure that satisfied both.

In the late 1920s, vibrators began appearing in blue movies. The camouflage was blown. Doctors dropped the treatment and manufacturers stopped advertising. The vibrator went underground and it disappeared from the annals of history until Maines happened upon it.

In the 1970s, the feminist movement, the birth control pill and legalized abortions ushered in the sexual revolution. Artist and author, Betty Dodson almost single handedly brought the vibrator back into women’s lives because of an accidental discovery. When Dodson and her lover used a barber’s scalp massager on her clitoris, she experienced intense orgasms. Inspired by this revelation, she began a crusade to teach women how to have orgasms with vibrators – alone and with partners.

In 2004, thirty years after Dodson’s happy discovery, the female orgasm is under attack again. Former fifth grade teacher, Joanne Webb, was arrested for selling vibrators to two undercover cops in a small Texas town. She had broken a state law that prohibits the sale of devices that stimulate the genitals. Texas and three other states have enacted these laws, a backlash to feminism. In these states, however, it is legal to advertise and sell Viagra. This double standard for women has far-reaching contemporary implications for sexual freedom, civil liberties and the right to privacy.


Here's What I Plan on Using as Sources

* The Professor that uses this film in her Human Sexuality Class at Cottey College- Professor Tietz

* Bitch Magazine Articles

*Oh My God- How to Get Off (Book)
*Adam and Eve (store)
*Passions (store)
*Passion Party Throwers
*The Internet
*The Good Sex Bible (Book)

Here's the Problem
If I am unable to get this film through the library or borrow it from Cottey, I need to find a way to watch it again. I looked it up and it is an educational video so it costs 200 dollars. I'm going to look up a few different resources and youtube. I REALLY would like to explore this movie so I need to find a backup plan to get it. Let me know!

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