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[Commlist] New book - Women in Neoliberal Postfeminist Television Drama
Mon Nov 11 15:27:49 GMT 2019
New book
/Women in Neoliberal Postfeminist Television Drama: Representing
gendered Experiences of the Second World War
https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030304485
1st ed. 2019, IX, 134 p.
Printed book
Hardcover
49,99 € | £44.99 | $59.99
[1]53,49 € (D) | 54,99 € (A) | CHF 59,00
eBook
41,64 € | £35.99 | $44.99 [2]41,64 € (D) | 41,64 € (A) | CHF 47,00
Available from your library or springer.com/shop
MyCopy [3]
Printed eBook for just € | $ 24.99 springer.com/mycopy
+++
Women in Neoliberal
Postfeminist Television
Drama
Representing Gendered Experiences of the Second World War
Demonstrates that postfeminism, far from being a spent force, remains a
structuring need in representations of women’s history on television
Offers a new perspective to debates on representations of women’s
experiences of the Second World War and moves the discussion beyond
questions regarding historical accuracy
Elaborates on the relationship between television and cultural memory
and the importance of television as a site of memory and identity
construction for groups whose stories are marginalised in mainstream
histories
“In this insightful book, Cat Mahoney offers a fascinating analysis of
contemporary TV dramas such as Home Fires, Land Girls and The Bletchley
Circle. Developing the idea that history is told through the
preoccupations of the present, she argues compellingly that these are
postfeminist dramas which work through troubling ideas about
heteronormative romance, domesticity, beauty and whiteness, while
reinforcing the idea that feminism as a political movement is not
necessary. A bold and original contribution to television studies,
gender studies and popular history.” Rosalind Gill, City, University of
London, UK By examining contemporary television drama set during and
immediately after the Second World War, this book illustrates the ways
in which postfeminism has shaped representations of women in
contemporary culture. Mahoney offers a new perspective to debates that
have previously been concerned with questions of historical accuracy.
She argues that depictions of women from the past in modern television
drama spawn from the neoliberal postfeminist media climate which
originated in the 1990s.
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