Popular Culture Review Vol. 11, No. 2, Summer 2000 | Page 39

Dorothy Dandridge^s Photograph 35 view herself, then according to Lacan, the photo becomes symbolic of the fomiation of Dandridge’s ego-ideal as she attempted to transform herself into what she witnessed in the mirror. Dandridge wanted the mirror to reflect whiteness so that she could mari^ a white man — white men, however, marry only white women. Dandridge wanted to transfonn herself not so much into a white woman but into a figure who possessed the signs of white womanness so that white men would want to marry her. In order to achieve this mirror image, Dandridge had to kill the outward signs of her blackness in herself, a process already begun by Hollywood, as the tension between her interiority (blackness) and exteriority (whiteness) — or between self and other ensued (Regester). Color as a construct of race becomes compounded with sexuality. Freud himself used the dark continent trope to refer to female sexuality. Thus, black women, because of their blackness, automatically became sexualized. As Dandridge, confirming these views, muses, “So many white men think there is nothing sweeter than having a brown botf on the side, under wraps, taken in the dark or kept behind the scenes” (107). Dandridge — because of her Africanness — is automatically objectified because of her sexuality, and in the words of Laura Mulvey becomes the object of the male gaze which “projects its phantasy onto the female figure...” (11). Mulvey’s views, however, although not entirely applicable with respect to race and sexuality, are applicable when she argues: Thus the woman as icon, displayed for the gaze and enjoyment of men, the active controllers of the look, always threatens to evoke the anxiety it originally signified. The male unconscious has two avenues o f escape from this castration anxiety: preoccupation with the re-enactment of the original trauma (in v estigating the wom an, dem ystifying her m ystery), counterbalanced by the devaluation, punishment or saving of the guilty object (an avenue typified by the concerns of the film noir); or else complete disavowal of castration by the substitution of a fetish object or turning the represented figure itself into a fetish so that it becomes reassuring rather than dangerous (hence over-valuation, the cult of the female star). This second avenue, fetishistic scopophilia, builds up the physical beauty of the object, transforming it into something satisfying in itself (13-4). In posing for this photograph provocatively, Dandridge understood that she was inviting the male gaze and that she was constructing herself as an object of desire. That Dandridge was deliberately striving to connote desirability is apparent in her posture and demeanor, with her slightly opened mouth and low-cut blouse.