Inaugural HRC Lecture in Gender Studies - The Indecent Screen: Prosecuting Indecency on US Television

In 2003, a jury in Michigan, convicted a performer on a local television show for indecent exposure. While the U.S. government has long sought to regulate indecency, profanity, and obscenity in broadcasting, such a charge had never been levied on a televised act. The case raises a number of questions about limitations on free expression in mass media: What regulatory rationales exclude television from the First Amendment’s free speech protections? Is a representational space—a TV screen, for example—equivalent to or distinct from a physical place, such as a public park? Are regulations in this area enforced equally regardless of the gender of a speaker or performer? This talk explores tensions between the media’s function as a spatially networked public sphere and the presumptive privacy of the domestic sphere, between bodies and screens, and between selves and images, and the implications of these tensions, especially for sexual subjects.

Cynthia Chris is Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of Media Culture at the College of Staten Island, City University of New York

The lecture is presented by Humanities Research Centre ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences in collaboration with the Gender Institute.

Date & time

Wed 13 Mar 2019, 6pm

Location

Theatrette, Sir Roland Wilson Building #120, McCoy Circuit, ANU

Speakers

Dr Cynthia Chris, City University of New York

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Updated:  13 March 2019/Responsible Officer:  Convenor, Gender Institute/Page Contact:  Gender Institute