This paper examines Desperately Seeking Susan (1985) through an interdisciplinary lens that integrates Johan Andersson’s concept of “gentrification by genre” with Jackie Stacey’s feminist reading of the film. Andersson highlights how the film commodifies New York City’s bohemianism, introducing it to mainstream audiences while eliding the grittier socioeconomic realities of gentrification. Stacey, on the other hand, underscores the film’s interrogation of female desire and friendship, where feminine identification evolves into an embrace of multiplicity. Building on these frameworks, I argue that the film creates moments of feminist spatial-political resistance by engaging urban transformation as a site for gender subversion. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s concept of “becoming-imperceptible,” I explore how the city’s transitional state enables female protagonists Roberta (Rosanna Arquette) and Susan (Madonna) to resist fixed identities, slipping between visibility and invisibility. This anonymity destabilizes patriarchal norms by creating ephemeral spaces for feminist agency, even as it remains incompatible with sustained collective action. By synthesizing urban studies with queer and feminist film theory, this analysis situates the film as an exemplary cultural text for negotiating the intersections of gender, urban aesthetics, and the politics of urban space.
Kyler Chittick (Sun,) studied this question.