Unhappily Ever After: Visual Irony and Feminist Strategy in Agnes Varda’s Happiness

Activity Type: 
Lecture
Presenter: 
Rebecca DeRoo
Date: 
Friday, February 17, 2012 - 15:00
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Location: 
Room 202 Frick Fine Arts

Although Agnes Varda is recognized as an early avatar of feminist filmmaking, her 1965 film Happiness remains a misunderstood work, frequently criticized for its ostensibly anti-feminist message. This lecture excavates specific sources of imagery from French women’s magazines that idealized the daily drudgery of the housewife and explains how Varda applied this imagery to her characters to challenge feminine ideals. This lecture shows that Happiness expands visually and thematically on two influential texts: Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex (1949) and Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique (1963). As a director making feminist films in an unreceptive climate, Varda employed a sophisticated strategy of visual irony in Happiness that disputes the film’s narrative and traditional notions of domestic harmony. We can thus discern new depths in postwar feminism and appreciate Varda’s contribution to a complex, trans-Atlantic dialogue about the structure of domestic life.

UCIS Unit: 
European Studies Center
Non-University Sponsors: 
Department of History of Art and Architecture
World Regions: 
Europe
Western Europe
European Union