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$4.99
The Male Gaze Checklist Postcard Ten questions. One framework. Pocket-sized. Conscious image-making. This 4″ × 6″ postcard presents the complete Male Gaze Checklist—a practical tool for evaluating how human figures are depicted in visual media. Ask: Is this person shown as autonomous, or arranged for display? Does the subject have agency, or exist to be…
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$25.99
The gaze is NOT neutral. “Men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at.” John Berger observed in Ways of Seeing (1972). Laura Mulvey established in “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” (1975) that “the determining male gaze projects its phantasy onto the female form” and that “pleasure in looking…
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$7.99
The Male Gaze Checklist Sticker Sheet Ten questions to ask. One critical framework. This interactive sticker sheet features all 10 questions from The Male Gaze Checklist in individual speech bubble stickers. Perfect for laptops, camera cases, editing monitors, sketchbooks, or classroom walls. Use them as visual reminders while creating or critiquing images. Check off each…
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$14.99
Make a statement. Wear your media literacy. This set of five 1.25″ round button pins delivers the core truth of visual culture in five distinct typographic styles – from bold and confrontational to elegant and subversive. Each design interprets “The Gaze Is Not Neutral” through a different visual lens, because how we see the message…
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$29.99
The Male Gaze Checklist Poster A visual reference for studios, classrooms, and creative spaces. This 24″ × 36″ poster presents the complete Male Gaze Checklist—ten essential questions for evaluating how human figures are depicted in art, film, photography, and media. Designed as a working tool, not just wall art. Each question prompts critical examination: Is…
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$15.99
For the ideas that need to be seen. This notebook pairs bold visual theory with practical use – a place to sketch, write, analyze, and document the images that shape how we see the world. The cover reminds you: every frame is a choice, every perspective carries power, and nothing you create (or consume) is…