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The alienated male: Silence and the soundtrack in New Hollywood

The alienated male: Silence and the soundtrack in New Hollywood This article explores the audible link between masculinity, silence and the soundtrack by focusing on a selection of silent alienated male characters from renowned New Hollywood films. In this discussion, the `type' of silence I often ´ refer to is that described by Paul Theberge as `a kind of silence that is produced when, for example, music is allowed to dominate the soundtrack while dialogue and sound effects ­ the primary sonic modes of the diegetic world ­ are muted' (2008: 51). The deployment of this technique in New Hollywood perhaps has ´ something to do with Theberge's later observation that in Western culture silence is a sign of abnormality, or of something to be feared (2008: 52). The films selected for this discussion are Easy Rider (1969), Bonnie and Clyde (1968), and The Graduate (1967). I explore the specific use of silence in these texts as well as the ways in which non-diegetic music and diegetic sound frequently express meanings not divulged by the male characters, due to their limited dialogue. I argue that this acoustic construction contributes to a projected sense of alienation of male characters and can also be linked to the blurring of gender http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The New Soundtrack Edinburgh University Press

The alienated male: Silence and the soundtrack in New Hollywood

The New Soundtrack , Volume 2 (2): 143 – Sep 1, 2012

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Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Copyright
© Edinburgh University Press
Subject
Articles; Film, Media and Cultural Studies
ISSN
2042-8855
eISSN
2042-8863
DOI
10.3366/sound.2012.0035
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This article explores the audible link between masculinity, silence and the soundtrack by focusing on a selection of silent alienated male characters from renowned New Hollywood films. In this discussion, the `type' of silence I often ´ refer to is that described by Paul Theberge as `a kind of silence that is produced when, for example, music is allowed to dominate the soundtrack while dialogue and sound effects ­ the primary sonic modes of the diegetic world ­ are muted' (2008: 51). The deployment of this technique in New Hollywood perhaps has ´ something to do with Theberge's later observation that in Western culture silence is a sign of abnormality, or of something to be feared (2008: 52). The films selected for this discussion are Easy Rider (1969), Bonnie and Clyde (1968), and The Graduate (1967). I explore the specific use of silence in these texts as well as the ways in which non-diegetic music and diegetic sound frequently express meanings not divulged by the male characters, due to their limited dialogue. I argue that this acoustic construction contributes to a projected sense of alienation of male characters and can also be linked to the blurring of gender

Journal

The New SoundtrackEdinburgh University Press

Published: Sep 1, 2012

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