Women in Popular Culture: Representation and Meaning

Front Cover
Marian Meyers
Hampton Press, 2008 - Social Science - 306 pages
Following upon the success of her book, ""Mediated Women: Representations in Popular Culture"", the author's latest anthology takes a new look at a wide range of contemporary images of women within the media to examine the meanings behind the representations of women in popular culture. This book explores what representation of women says about their positions in society, the factors that shape representation, and the roles that gender, race, class, ethnicity and sexual orientation play within the mediated portrayal of women.Drawing primarily on qualitative textual analysis of film, reality TV, advertising, the news, children's programming, soap operas, TV drama, and more, the book situates the representation of woemn in popular culture along a continuum ranging from stereotypical portrayals that underscore women's bodies as pornographic spectacle to more positive and hopeful depictions. And it argues that the contemporary portrayals of women within popular culture are shaped by two major trends: the mainstreaming of pornography and its resultant hypersexualization of women and girls, and the commodification of those images for a global market.

Contents

THE PORNOGRIFICATION OF WOMEN
20
A Bad Habit of Thinking Challenging
29
An Examination of Sexual Portrayals
57
Black Feminism Corporeal Fragmentation
73
An Examination of the Latina as Maid
85
The Multiply Transgressive Body of Anna Nicole Smith
101
Disneys Mulan
123
Reassembling Gender
137
The L Word and Queer
171
Representations of American Indian
185
The Powerpuff Girls As a Site
211
Feminism And Daytime Soap Operas
237
The Dialectical Relationship of Women and Media
257
About the Contributors
277
Subject Index
287
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