Interrogating Postfeminism: Gender and the Politics of Popular CultureYvonne Tasker, Diane Negra Duke University Press, 2007 M11 2 - 344 pages This timely collection brings feminist critique to bear on contemporary postfeminist mass media culture, analyzing phenomena ranging from action films featuring violent heroines to the “girling” of aging women in productions such as the movie Something’s Gotta Give and the British television series 10 Years Younger. Broadly defined, “postfeminism” encompasses a set of assumptions that feminism has accomplished its goals and is now a thing of the past. It presumes that women are unsatisfied with their (taken for granted) legal and social equality and can find fulfillment only through practices of transformation and empowerment. Postfeminism is defined by class, age, and racial exclusions; it is youth-obsessed and white and middle-class by default. Anchored in consumption as a strategy and leisure as a site for the production of the self, postfeminist mass media assumes that the pleasures and lifestyles with which it is associated are somehow universally shared and, perhaps more significantly, universally accessible. Essays by feminist film, media, and literature scholars based in the United States and United Kingdom provide an array of perspectives on the social and political implications of postfeminism. Examining magazines, mainstream and independent cinema, popular music, and broadcast genres from primetime drama to reality television, contributors consider how postfeminism informs self-fashioning through makeovers and cosmetic surgery, the “metrosexual” male, the “black chick flick,” and more. Interrogating Postfeminism demonstrates not only the viability of, but also the necessity for, a powerful feminist critique of contemporary popular culture. Contributors. Sarah Banet-Weiser, Steven Cohan, Lisa Coulthard, Anna Feigenbaum, Suzanne Leonard, Angela McRobbie, Diane Negra, Sarah Projansky, Martin Roberts, Hannah E. Sanders, Kimberly Springer, Yvonne Tasker, Sadie Wearing |
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... Recent books such as those by Kim Akass and Janet McCabe ( 2004 ) and Ariel Levy ( 2005 ) exemplify the emergence of popu- larized feminist scholarship . While Levy , a journalist , explores the formulaic female sexualities of a culture ...
... recent modernism " ; for us the question of chronology , and of change , is pressing in a somewhat dif- ferent manner since postfeminist culture speaks both to and against the very feminism within which we situate our scholarship ...
... recent years.35 While the emergence of a postfeminist canon ( one alluded to in the examples cited above ) has be- come increasingly evident , it is nonetheless the case that postfeminism means different things in these national and ...
... recent films link to women's participation in the service economy . Tracking the presence and absence of race discourses in both postfeminist representa- tion and the scholarship on postfeminism remains a vital task.39 Once again the ...
... recent years , a number of significant books have provided a context for this volume : Yvonne Tasker's Working Girls ... recently Susan Douglas's and Meredith Michaels's The Mommy Myth : The Idealisation of Motherhood and How It Has ...