16 research outputs found

    ‘C’était moi mais ce n’était pas moi’: portrayal of the disabled body in Catherine Breillat’s Abus de faiblesse (2013)

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    Writer/director Catherine Breillat’s most recent film, Abus de faiblesse (2013), explores an important moment of bodily transition: the change from able to disabled body. This semi-autobiographic film follows the story of film director Maud (Breillat’s alter ego), who forms a destructive relationship with a conman, Vilko, after she suffers a disabling stroke. This film shows consistency with Breillat’s previous work in its exploration of the constructed nature of the female body onscreen. In the past the filmmaker has portrayed moments of trauma and transition (such as childbirth, loss of virginity or rape) to subvert processes of objectification. The article argues that Abus de faiblesse challenges and subverts representation of the post-menopausal and disabled body onscreen. The film interrogates binary oppositions such as able/disabled and independence/dependency to challenge representations of the disabled body as ‘other’. With reference to scholarly work on disability and the ageing female body, the article suggests that Maud’s sadomasochistic relationship with Vilko is driven by a quest to retain her subjectivity after her stroke. The article demonstrates that the film dissects the feared and the unknown territory of the ageing female body

    “Older-wiser-lesbians” and “baby-dykes”: mediating age and generation in New Queer Cinema

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    Representations of intersections of gender, age, and sexuality can reveal deep-rooted cultural anxieties about older women and sexuality. Images of lesbian ageing are of particular interest in terms of alterity, as the old/er queer woman can combine layers of otherness—not only is she the cultural “other” within heteronormativity, but she can also appear as the opposite of popular culture’s lesbian chic. In this article, a cultural analysis of a range of films—If These Walls Could Talk 2 (dir. Anderson, Coolidge, and Heche 2000), Itty Bitty Titty Committee (dir. Babbit 2007), The Owls (dir. Dunye 2010), Hannah Free (dir. Carlton 2009), and Cloudburst (dir. Fitzgerald 2011)—considers diverse dramatisations of lesbian generations. This article interrogates to what extent alternative cinemas deconstruct normative conceptualisations of ageing. Drawing on recent critiques of post-feminist culture, and a range of feminist and age/ing studies scholarship, it suggests that a linear understanding of ageing and the generational underlies dominant depictions of oppositional binaries of young versus old, of generational segregation or rivalry, and the othering of age. It concludes that non-linear understandings of temporality and ageing contain the potential for New Queer Cinema to counteract such idealisations of youthfulness, which, it argues, is one of the most deep-rooted manifestations of (hetero)normativity

    Las ancianas en Estados Unidos: mitos y realidades

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    The mirror has two faces

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    Using the Pediatric Asthma Therapy Assessment Questionnaire to Measure Asthma Control and Healthcare Utilization in Children

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    Background: The usefulness of questionnaires to assess asthma control in clinical practice is recognized in recent international guidelines. While several questionnaires have been developed to measure asthma control in adults, there has been little study of the performance of such instruments in children. Abstract: Objective: To determine whether there is an association between asthma-related healthcare use and poor asthma control, as determined by categorical score on the control domain of the Asthma Therapy Assessment Questionnaire for children and adolescents (the pediatric ATAQ). Abstract: Methods: An analysis of a 1998 mailed survey of parents or caregivers of children aged 5-17 years with asthma enrolled in three large managed-care organizations in the Northeast and Midwest US was conducted. Pediatric ATAQ control domain score (reported for the past 4 weeks) was the main outcome measure. The pediatric ATAQ control domain was scored from 0 to 7, with 0 indicating no asthma control problems as measured by the questionnaire, and higher scores indicating increasing asthma problems. The hypothesis of an association between pediatric ATAQ control domain score and asthma-related healthcare use (hospitalizations, ER or urgent care facility visits, and doctor visits for worsening asthma in the past 12 months) was examined. Abstract: Results: 406 completed surveys were received. Asthma-related hospitalizations, ER/urgent care visits, and doctor visits were reported for 38, 173, and 319 children, respectively. Of the three control score categories (0, 1-3, and 4-7), children with a control score of 4-7 were more likely to have been hospitalized (p - 0.01), to have visited the ER or urgent care facility (p < 0.0001), or to have visited a doctor (p - 0.0001) because of asthma managed care. In multivariate models including demographic variables and a measure of general health status, higher odds of ER/urgent care visits (odds ratio &lsqb;OR&rsqb; 3.47, 95% CI 1.92, 6.26) and doctor visits (OR 7.14; 95% CI 2.40, 21.2) was observed for children with an asthma control score of 4-7 than for children with no identified asthma control problems (score of 0). An asthma control score of 4-7 was significantly associated with hospitalization in a multivariate model including only demographic variables (OR 3.06; 95% CI 1.28, 7.33) but not in a model that included general health status (OR 2.44; 95% CI 0.96, 6.16). Relative to an excellent health status, a fair or poor health status was significantly associated with asthma-related hospitalization (OR 7.03; 95% CI 1.71, 28.87). Compared with White race, Black race was significantly associated with hospitalization (OR 2.30; 95% CI 1.05, 5.04) and ER/urgent care visits (OR 2.89; 95% CI 1.67, 5.01). Abstract: Conclusions: Children identified as having poor asthma control using the pediatric ATAQ instrument had significantly higher rates of asthma-related hospitalizations, ER or urgent care visits, and doctor visits than those with good control. This asthma control measure may be useful in identifying children in need of more intensive asthma management.
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