In the present article, I wish to concentrate on what may be called “transgressive border-crossings” engaged in by the protagonists of Ferzan Özpetek’s Hamam in two poignant instances of “hamam spying”, which – though effected in different configurations, for different purposes, and with drastically different consequences – introduce positions of “uninitiated” novices kept outside looking in. What I intend to engage with is Istanbul as a “third space”; a liminal space looming as a challenge to the individual, instilling fear as much as unleashing temptation and a faint promise or threat of finding out and being found out, of revealing, taking in, laying bare, getting laid, getting lost. By looking at Francesco and Mehmet looking (from above) at unsuspecting women in the bagno, and Marta looking (from below) at Francesco and Mehmet looking at one another in the shelter of Francesco’s originally unwanted inherited hamam, I wish to investigate the implications of reversing the male gaze in what may seem as downright “queering” the hamam but what might just as well turn out to be a decolonisation of the space and an attempt at reclaiming it.
CITATION STYLE
Szołtysek, J. (2020). Building up steam: Gaze, gateways, and gays in ferzan Özpetek’s hamam. Oceanide, 12, 63–71. https://doi.org/10.37668/oceanide.v12i.26
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