Unmarked Exits

S02 E19: Ways of Seeing: The Politics of the Visual and the Male Gaze

52 min · 4. maj 2026
episode S02 E19: Ways of Seeing: The Politics of the Visual and the Male Gaze cover

Description

Before you can critique what images show, you have to understand how seeing works. And seeing is never neutral. In this episode, we explore John Berger's revolutionary series of essays, originally a BBC programme, that changed how we think about art, advertising, and visual culture. Berger shows how oil painting served property relations, how publicity images manipulate our sense of lack, and how men look at women differently than women look at themselves. It's short, clear, and illustrated. Berger believed criticism should be accessible. He practiced what he preached. The question he keeps returning to: who benefits from the way we've been taught to see? Source: "Ways of Seeing" by John Berger (1972)

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Unmarked Exits community!

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

24 episodes

episode S02 E23: No Logo: Brands, Sweatshops, and the Colonization of Public Space artwork

S02 E23: No Logo: Brands, Sweatshops, and the Colonization of Public Space

There was a time when companies made products. Then they discovered it was more profitable to make brands. Products can be manufactured anywhere. Brands are pure image. In this episode, we explore Naomi Klein's landmark study of how corporations colonized public space, culture, and identity itself. Nike doesn't sell shoes. It sells the idea of athletic transcendence. Starbucks doesn't sell coffee. It sells the experience of sophisticated community. Klein documented sweatshops, school commercialization, and the gutting of manufacturing. But her deeper argument is about how branding turned citizens into consumers and public life into a marketplace. Published in 1999, on the eve of the anti-globalization movement. History didn't go the way protesters hoped. Source: "No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies" by Naomi Klein (1999)

Yesterday49 min
episode S02 E22: The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Aura and Its Dissolution artwork

S02 E22: The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Aura and Its Dissolution

What makes an original artwork special? Something Benjamin called "aura": its unique presence in time and space, its unrepeatable existence. But what happens when perfect copies become possible? In this episode, we explore Benjamin's famous essay on how photography and film changed art forever. Reproduction destroys aura, but it also democratizes access. Art leaves the realm of ritual and enters politics. Benjamin, writing in 1935, saw both promise and danger. Fascism aestheticizes politics, makes spectacles of rallies and war. The left must respond by politicizing aesthetics. He died fleeing the Nazis in 1940. His questions about images and power didn't die with him. Source: "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" by Walter Benjamin (1935)

25. maj 202642 min
episode S02 E21: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business artwork

S02 E21: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business

Orwell feared the banning of books. Huxley feared there would be no reason to ban them. Postman argues Huxley was right. In this episode, we explore how television changed not just what we think about, but how we think. Postman's argument isn't that TV shows bad content. It's that television as a medium is structurally incapable of supporting serious discourse. Everything becomes entertainment: news, politics, education, religion. Written in 1985, before the internet, before social media, before smartphones. Postman worried about what television was doing to attention spans and public discourse. He hadn't seen anything yet. Source: "Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business" by Neil Postman (1985)

18. maj 202657 min
episode S02 E21: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business artwork

S02 E21: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business

Orwell feared the banning of books. Huxley feared there would be no reason to ban them. Postman argues Huxley was right. In this episode, we explore how television changed not just what we think about, but how we think. Postman's argument isn't that TV shows bad content. It's that television as a medium is structurally incapable of supporting serious discourse. Everything becomes entertainment: news, politics, education, religion. Written in 1985, before the internet, before social media, before smartphones. Postman worried about what television was doing to attention spans and public discourse. He hadn't seen anything yet. Source: "Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business" by Neil Postman (1985)

18. maj 202657 min
episode S02 E20: Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man and the Reshaping of Thought artwork

S02 E20: Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man and the Reshaping of Thought

"The medium is the message." You've heard the phrase. But what does it actually mean? In this episode, we explore McLuhan's provocative, chaotic, often contradictory masterwork. His argument: we focus too much on what media contain and miss how they reshape us. Television didn't just broadcast new content. It rewired how people think, feel, and relate. McLuhan saw the internet coming. He called it the "global village." He saw how electronic media would retribalize humanity while simultaneously isolating individuals. He was a Catholic conservative who became a countercultural icon. He was celebrated and dismissed, often by the same people. Fifty years later, we're still catching up. Source: "Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man" by Marshall McLuhan (1964)

11. maj 202645 min