Monday, March 26, 2012

Experiment

I'd like to perform an "experiment" (not sure if that's the right term), on a controlled focus group.
The plan is to get 3 different males, photograph each one 3 times. One photo the guy will be happy, another of him neutral, the last one of him "brooding" (so looking down, pouty, shameful, depressed, deep in thought. Something like that).

The girl has to rate each picture on a scale of 1-10 (1 being the least and 10 being the most attractive). This is to see if the brooding boy really is what females prefer today.

This experiment is based on/ is a simplified version of a scientific study

That link I just shared is one of many articles that say exactly the same thing (sometimes the wording is exactly the same as well). That women are attracted to prideful or brooding men more than the happy one. I chose that website specifically because it includes these quotes:


"The study also adds fuel to the notion that women are attracted to bad boys.
"Women are attracted to guys like James Dean, Edward the vampire. The guys who are flawed, but who know it and are tortured by it," Tracy said.(Jessica Tracy, a University of British Columbia psychology professor who directed the study.)
A slightly downcast expression of shame is an appeasement gesture that hints at a need for sympathy.
...
"When people want a long-term relationship they take much more into account than sexual attractiveness. How nice a person is, is a big thing," Tracy said.
"So we're not saying, don't be a nice guy," she said."

Friday, March 23, 2012

The Men of Brooding

The Men on Brooding
Tumblr

A whole tumblr devoted to images and videos of brooding men, including a picture of Robert Pattinson (plays Edward Cullen), multiple images of Austen men and a Raining men montage. Along with pictures of  good looking actors who, no matter how happy their persona are, are staring deeply and troubledly into the camera.

Love ittt.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

What Makes Damaged Heroes Hot?

Love Romance Passion

What Makes Damaged Heroes Hot?

by Keira



On the outside a damaged hero is a tough-as-nails-and-probably-eats-them-too masculine figure. Inside though is a whole different story. I think that’s one of the biggest reasons why damaged heroes appeal to female readers. We want to care for, nurture, and heal him. It makes the heroine (and through her us) feel needed. A damaged hero’s heroine is crucial to his fundamental wellbeing.
There are many types of damaged heroes. He usually gets classified as one of them when readers and reviewers talk about him. These classifications are:
  • Scarred
  • Wounded
  • Tragic
  • Tortured
  • Burdened
Scarred –
A scarred hero is an exteriorly damaged hero. His body has suffered a lot and is usually covered in scars. Most authors either scar his body or his face, rarely both at the same time. The lost of his looks is a real blow for this type of hero.

Wounded –
A wounded hero can also have scars, but he also is facing physical damage. He has disabling headaches or limited mobility and even potential loss of limbs. He could also have lost one or more of his senses.

Tragic –

A tragic hero in romance is an emotionally damaged hero. He’s lost family, friends, careers, purpose, and drive. He is almost always a recluse and a shut-in. He doesn’t want to love again. Getting hurt again just might kill him.

Tortured –

A tortured hero is a damaged hero at the end of his rope. He is already at his lowest point and feels like he can’t get any lower. He may have been emotionally or mentally abused. He could have been neglected or badly treated by someone in his past resulting in wild crazy theories on how worthless he is.

Burdened –

A burdened hero is a damaged hero who acts alone. Over the years he’s learned to rely on himself and not to trust others. This means he doesn’t connect very well to the heroine at first because he’s so set in his thinking. A burdened hero may have been living with a dark secret for a long time. He could be seeking vengeance, revenge, or absolution.
What type of damaged hero is your favourite and why?
This was exactly what I was thinking of and as I asked my friends to list their favourite Tall, Dark, Handsome and Brooding (TDHB?) characters, I was forced to explain the type of character I was looking for. I mentioned tortured sensitive souls, heavy burdens, guilty pasts and general whining. Judging by descriptions, to my mind, the Tortured and Burdened man is the most attractive and is what we see most of in pop culture today. Take the poll on the site!


Amazingly though, as I voted for burdened, the poll results from 111 votes gave me this:


Burdened was right at the bottom. People prefer the pitiful, sensitive tortured soul and the physical scarred heroes over the burdened one. Interesting. 

Is Edward Cullen the new Mr. Darcy?

Courtesy of SAC Teacher
Love Romance Passion

Is Edward Cullen the new Mr. Darcy?

by Keira 


edwardcullen
In the fashion that orange is the new pink, is Edward Cullen to be touted as the ideal man for future generations in the same manner Mr. Darcy has been glorified? I’m not saying that Edward Cullen is a Darcy Double or Darcy Reincarnated or even a Darcy Sequel. Edward Cullen is as far from Darcy as a literary romantic hero can be – he’s the undead after all.
Women of all ages and ethnicities have fallen at the feet of the passionate and feral Edward Cullen. He is as impossible a character as Mr. Darcy with his moodiness, aloofness, and let’s face it overbearing behavior. Elizabeth Bennet would not have stood for it, but Bella is enchanted by it. What Edward Cullen can get away with on paper no man in his right mind would try in real life. It is one thing to love Edward’s protective stalker tendencies and quite another to experience it first hand. I’ll be the first to admit I love every aspect of Edward Cullen’s character, so by pointing out the obvious I’m not dismissing his infinite appeal.
Edward Cullen watches over Bella Swan in a similar manner that Angel watched over Buffy in season one. Of course when Angel loses his soul in season two and hovers over Buffy while she sleeps it’s seen as creepy and more than slightly unnerving. Naturally, there is a dramatic difference between being watched over by a protective presence than a sinister one. I’m quite sure Buffy would not have minded Angel watching her; it was Angelus that was the demonic and unwanted presence. Edward does not behave like Angelus and of course Bella wants him around. She thrives off his very presence and noticeably misses his absence awake or asleep. It also helps that as the reader we are enlightened to Edward’s true motivations and can be sure of him. Edward is seen as a guardian angel… and who would tell a guardian angel to go away? That would indeed be madness.
mrdarcySpeaking of madness, this brings me to the next point; to be desired as Bella or Elizabeth is every woman’s secret fantasy. Darcy loved Elizabeth ardently; Edward loved Bella fiercely. It is a heady thing to be wanted so much that to be parted from you is sheer agony of spirit and body. Darcy would do anything for Elizabeth, including reunite her sister with the man she loved or patch up one seriously incriminating scandal; Edward would kill for Bella… he would even leave her if he thought it best… and he did. Both. Edward even tolerated the presence of his competition, Jacob, because to do otherwise caused Bella great distress.
Darcy and Edward share many characteristics, being men born to a similar time. They are strong-willed, powerful, imposing and dependable. Despite their good qualities, both literary heroes exhibit some very negative qualities that at the whim of one stroke of a pen or tap of the keyboard could easily have alienated them permanently from their loves. Including a severe lack of the society grace for small talking, Darcy showed the character flaws of pride and prejudice. Also suffering under a lack of social graces, Edward’s more serious flaws are arrogance and a stubborn certainty that he is always right. He is so determined to protect Bella from himself he fails to admit her feelings or opinions have merit. This grossly unacceptable behavior throws the star-crossed lovers into intensely charged conversations and months of grief stricken paralysis, where both are unable to function because of their emotional wounds.
Luckily for both men they get out of their own way and win against all odds love, happiness, and peace. Nothing could be sweeter to readers or more potent. As I’ve demonstrated, Edward while similar to Darcy is distinctly set apart and it’s not just because he’s immortal. His very presence has rocked the foundations of the great romantic literary heroes and they have shifted aside to give him space. It’s yet to be seen if Edward will match Darcy’s fame in the generations to come or perhaps to even eclipse the brooding figure all together.
For those who have read both love stories what are your thoughts on the subject? If you haven't you need to read them right away!
So I was absolutely delighted when I received this in an email from my teacher. It was exactly what I needed to get started and I love the fact that it refers to the three male characters I was thinking about. It points out the aspects of each character (both similar and different) that are positive and appeal to the female audience: the fierce love, devotion, tolerance, protectiveness, powerful. And also the flaws of the characters: danger, arrogance, pride, prejudice (hah), overbearing. I also tried to find out more about the author of this article to check reliability, her other works and such. Here's what I found:
And on the very very top of her list of Turn Ons is:
"Blind, wounded, emotionally embittered, scarred and damaged heroes. Need I go on?"

If you click on that link, it'll lead me to my next post

People's Choice

Asking my Society and Culture Class and group of friends who their favourite brooder was:

McDreamy (Greys Anatomy)
Stefan and Damon Salvator (The Vampire Diaries)
Bill Compton and Eric Northman (True Blood)
Ned Stark (Game of Thrones)
Leonardo DiCaprio characters
Kevin Costner (Bodyguard)
Edward Cullen and Jacob Black (Twilight)
Peeta (Hunger Games)
Caleb (Pretty Little Liars)
Donnie (Donnie Darko)
Batman movies
Ryan Gosling characters
John Green
Every Nicholas Sparks Novel
Ryan Atwood (The OC)
Robert Downey Junior characters
Dean and Sam Wincester (Supernatural)
Fallen series
Mr Darcy (Pride&Prejudice)
Angel (Buffy)

Vampires in general are very broody. I'm guessing immortality makes people mull over their good looks and appetite being the demise of an innocent or something. Or maybe they just have to live with the regrets of something that happened in their human life. Or they might just hate their very own existence as a vampire. This is what I've gathered from all the vampire shows I've been watching (Vampire Diaries, True Blood, Buffy: The Vampire Slayer)

My PIP

The Title: The ideal man, The female ideals: The Tall, Dark, Handsome and BROODING.


The rising popularity of the tortured soul and it's appeal to women. 
Some kind of study on the angsty fictional men that females seem to love these days. E.g. Edward Cullen (Twilight) , Angel (from Buffy), Mr Darcy (Pride and Prejudice) etc.
The need females have to "fix" or save a man from himself. The maternal instinct and the possible result in a co-dependent relationship. 


I made Mila do the "pick-one-hand-and-that's-what-you'll-do" technique. It's the Ideal Man for girls: Tall, Dark, Handsome and BROODING.

NOW COMMIT COURTNEY!

Tutorial #1 (Wednesday 21/03/2012)

Technically this is my 3rd meeting with my teacher, but for organisations sake, lets just start new.

Usually people leave these sessions with a sense of pride, accomplishment, anticipation and/or shit-scared. Today I was mix of all four. So far in my "journey" (I really hate calling it that, it seems so english advanced....but I can't think of anything else right now so I'll stick with it for now.), I have gone through craploads of ideas, flowcharts, Google searches (my God, the Google searches), concepts and even performed two methodologies for an idea I probably won't go through with. So far my "genius" ideas include:

  • Violent women in film (this obviously branched off with more specific concepts but cbf. This will probably happen with the next few ideas too)
  • Teen literature and the influence on teens 
  • Creativity and it's place in the world
  • Jane Austen, her message and place in the world both in past and present. 
  • Feminism, feminism, feminism, post-feminism, post-feminism, second wave feminism, third wave feminism, neo-feminism annnddddddddd feminism. 
Now the Jane Austen one led me to the question: What makes a man, a man? What are the qualities that make you a man? Do you have to pass a test? Go through a specific rite of passage? What in a guys life could influence the man they become? What do girls think the ideal man is? Why do they think that?

And so on and so forth. So here is what I pretty much did today:
Hopefully my subconscious isn't too hard to read (or my writing). So basically near the end of my session (which went for about 2 hours), me and teacher evaluated my poor representation of my brain. We cut down. A lot. So I was left to two ideas:
  1. The ideal man - The female ideals: The Tall, Dark, Handsome and BROODING. The rising popularity of the tortured soul and it's appeal to women. Some kind of study on the angsty fictional men that females seem to love these days. E.g. Edward Cullen (Twilight) , Angel (from Buffy), Mr Darcy (Pride and Prejudice) etc.
  2. The socialisation of boys: The virtual social life of young adult males. Looking into socialisation on virtual online role-playing gaming. Social gatherings in places that specialise in providing rows of computers for gaming. The ability to play with someone in India. The homogenisation of socialisation. 
But now I'm left with the dilemma of: 
WHICH FREAKING ONE?!?!?

I love the idea and concept behind both and would thoroughly enjoy the primary research for each. Content analysis (watching movies and noting stuff), observation (Just watching [inter]actions of people in their natural environment to find any particulars or patterns) and MORE!

I need to submit my question by the end of the school day tomorrow and email my teacher. 

Comments

All posts allow you to comment. So feel free to leave any thoughts, opinions, ideas, any kind of helpful information (website links, stories, names of people I could talk to etc.) or questions. You can leave them anonymous (so trolls, start your engines), leave your name with the comment or sign in with a Google account and just post it through that. 

So how to use this site:

**Unfortunately, the Pages app for blogger which allows me to have proper tabs at the top of the page only allows one page of information and not actual posts which sucks. Trying to figure this shizz out.


On the side bar you'll see a heading called "Info About Headers". This refers to the title tabs at the top: AboutPlansPrimary ResearchSecondary Research and Tutorials. If you click the headings on the side bar, you will get a description about what kind of information and things you'll see IF you click on the heading at the top with the same name.


So e.g.:  
When I click the the Tutorials link on the SIDE BARit'll give a description of what the Tutorials heading on the top is about.




If you click on the tutorials header link at the TOP of the page, you'll find actualposts/entries about different tutorials I've had:

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

An Introduction:

Welcome to PIProject.

I am a society and culture student in Year 12 and have to do a Personal Interest Project which requires me to do extensive research and produce a 4000-7000 word report about the subject of my choice. I am already 2 Terms in and I still haven't come up with a subject or question. So basically I'm a little freaked out.

In order to record my process in a way that I can easily keep track of things, I have created this blog. I will post ideas, secondary research findings, plans to help develop this PIP, content from my tutorials with my society and culture teacher, results from methodologies, and of course: my stress rants about this.

Hopefully I stick to this and it helps me out.