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Joaquim da Silva Fontes, Significação e Estabilidade do Género no ...

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Figure 67. Scarlet Street<br />

The symbolism of the ice-pick as lethal weapon contrasts with that of the paintbrush used<br />

by the artist to paint Kitty. From a sitting model and object of veneration she becomes the<br />

helpless prone victim of the man who used to worship her. The hands of the artist would<br />

never touch her physically and yet they were constantly reaching out to touch her through<br />

his paintings. These artefacts translate <strong>no</strong>t only his sensibility but at the same time they<br />

seem to function as a form of “tactile perception”. Indeed, Chris’s identity as an artist will<br />

be viciously stolen from him by Kitty as she signs the paintings with her own name for<br />

money, insinuating that by <strong>do</strong>ing so she feels that she is married to him. Cross<br />

masochistically agrees with this situation and tacitly ack<strong>no</strong>wledges his castration.<br />

Therefore, the final act of murdering her with an ice-pick might be perceived as a banished<br />

violation, but also as a way of finally being able, through the stabbings, “to sign” the body<br />

of Kitty, who has herself put her own marks on his paintings.<br />

The applications (and implications) of the human hand are strongly evident in this<br />

movie, as they are in many others. Below are a set of figures all taken from Fritz Lang’s<br />

mention the phallic feminist revenge item, the ice-pick used by Catherine Tramell (Sharon Stone) in Basic<br />

Instinct (1992).<br />

277

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