• The Philadelphia Story : Growing Up Is Hard to Do Foa, Pamela 2021 Film and Philosophy , Vol. 25 , S. 85 ff. ( Zeitschrift ) Englisch 1073-0427 | 2643-9239 10.5840/filmphil2021346 Abstract

    Contra Stanley Cavell in Pursuits of Happiness, I argue that in The Philadelphia Story Tracy Lord (Katherine Hepburn) squanders her opportunity for a fully mature relationship when she rejects Mike Connor (Jimmy Stewart) to remarry her former husband, C. K. Dexter Haven (Cary Grant). Critics of Cavell’s analysis of this film have generally accepted that at their remarriage Tracy and Dexter are perfect for each other, but disagree about which of the men in her life is responsible for her education and maturation. I argue, instead, that to become the intelligent, erotic, fully mature woman she can be, Tracy should have married Mike. To defend my view, I look at details in The Philadelphia Story that have not been widely noted (e.g. the wordless prologue and costuming) and offer a different interpretation of some other details that have been noticed. On my analysis, at the end of the movie, faced with the prospect of true autonomy, Tracy becomes so frightened that she abandons her agency and retreats to the stability and protection that her former husband represents.

    Schlagwörter

    Applied Philosophy | Contemporary Philosophy | Semiotics

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Foa, Pamela
Applied Philosophy
Contemporary Philosophy
Semiotics

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