Daddy`s Girl – Young Girls and Popular Culture
Autor Valerie Walkerdineen Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 sep 2017
Walkerdine's study looks at little girls on television and in the movies, in advertisements and popular songs. In figures from Annie to Shirley Temple in any number of her plucky poor girl roles, she shows us little orphans saddled with the task of representing the self-sufficient working class on the one hand and the loveable object of middle class charity on the other. The real working class girl, whose fantasies feed on a strange mix of these images and the rest of what popular culture offers, with all its glamorized sex and violence, is also the object of Walkerdine's attention. Reflecting on her own working class roots and taking us into the homes and the confidence of working class girls today as they watch television and movies and listen to popular songs, she gives us a sense, at once troubling and poignant, of the portrayal and manipulation of little girls as a canny part of the production of civilized femininity. At the center of this work is the issue of how girl children are taught to think of themselves and how their depiction puts them in their place. This concern leads Walkerdine to questions about television and parental control, about Freud's seduction theory and the origins of fantasy, about the political and erotic meaning of the ubiquitous gaze our culture trains on the little girl, and about academics' approach to the subject.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780674186019
ISBN-10: 067418601X
Pagini: 209
Dimensiuni: 548 x 323 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Harvard University Press
ISBN-10: 067418601X
Pagini: 209
Dimensiuni: 548 x 323 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Harvard University Press
Descriere
Reflecting on her own working class roots and taking us into the homes and the confidence of working class girls today, Valerie Walkerdine raises troubling questions about television and parental control, about Freud's seduction theory, and the manipulation of little girls and their thoughts and feelings about themselves and their "place" in their world.