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Morphing Moonlight: Gender, masks and carnival mayhem- The ...

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egulated by rules, named codes; <strong>and</strong> that the subject or agent of this<br />

attribution, the reader or viewer, is a decisive element in the process.<br />

(Bal 1996: 26)<br />

Each <strong>and</strong> every act of viewing takes place within a given socio-historical<br />

<strong>and</strong> political situation <strong>and</strong> each viewer brings to any reading of an image<br />

their own cultural subjectivity, or frame of reference (Bal 1996: 32).<br />

Reading becomes an act of interpretation <strong>and</strong> assigning of meaning during<br />

which the reader reframes the work according to a given set of signs that<br />

connect together <strong>and</strong> provide a text with meaning. As Bal writes:<br />

I am contending that every act of looking is - not only, not<br />

exclusively, but always also - a reading, simply because without the<br />

processing of signs into syntactic chains that resonate against the<br />

backdrop of a frame of reference an image cannot yield meaning.<br />

(Bal 1996: 32)<br />

Reading is, however, a subjective activity <strong>and</strong> the image becomes the place<br />

where cultural processes collide <strong>and</strong> become intersubjective in a process that<br />

involves the interaction of present tense with past tense, where the present<br />

interprets <strong>and</strong> alters the past. This sets up the interdiscursivity of a painting<br />

as an ‘intervention in <strong>and</strong> a response to social discourses that were relevant<br />

at the time <strong>and</strong> are still relevant or differently relevant to our time’ (Bal<br />

1996: 32).<br />

Mieke Bal’s igenuity is in her decision to read visual art as a narrative where<br />

signs <strong>and</strong> not scenes are the basis of vision. Each narrative entails a selection<br />

that involves omissions, suppressions, emphases <strong>and</strong> evasions. All narratives<br />

are thus focused through points of view (Bal 2001: 12). In Bal’s narrative<br />

27

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