Fr. 56.90

Becoming a Woman Through Romance

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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A woman is incomplete without a man, motherhood is a woman's destiny, and a woman's place is in the home. These conservative political themes are woven throughout teen romance fiction's sagas of hearts and flowers.

Using the theory and interpretive methods of feminism and cultural studies, Christian-Smith explores the contradictory role that popular culture plays in constructing gender, class, race, age and sexual meanings. Originally published in 1990, Becoming a Woman through Romance combines close textual analyses of thirty-four teen romance novels (written in the United States from 1942-1982) with a school study in three midwestern American schools.

Christian-Smith situates teen romance fiction within the rapidly changing publishing industry and the important political and economic changes in the United States surrounding the rise of the New Right. By analysing the structure of the novels in terms of the themes of romance, sexuality and beautification, and the Good/Bad and Strong/Weak dichotomies, she demonstrates how each has shaped the novels' versions of femininity over forty years. She also shows that although romance fiction is presented as a universal model, it is actually an expression of white middle class gender ideology and tension within this class.

This high readable, comprehensive and coherent work was the first to combine in one volume three vital areas of cultural studies research: the political economy of publishing, textual analysis, and a study of readers. The first full-scale study of teen romance fiction, Becoming a Woman through Romance establishes the importance of the study of popular culture forms found in school for understanding the process of school materials in identity formation.

List of contents

Series Editor’s Introduction. Acknowledgements. 1. Overview 2. Love Makes the World Go ‘Round’: The Code of Romance 3. Sealed with a Kiss: The Code of Sexuality 4. Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: The Code of Beautification 5. Keepers of Heart and Hearth: Gender, Class, and Race in Romance Fiction 6. Becoming a Woman: Narrative and Femininity 7. Romancing Girls: Romance Fiction and Its Readers 8. The World of Romance and Beyond 9. A Place in the World. Appendices. Notes. Bibliography. Index.

About the author










Linda K. Christian-Smith

Summary

Using the theory and interpretive methods of feminism and cultural studies, the author explores the contradictory role that popular culture plays in constructing gender, class, race, age and sexual meanings. First published in 1990, this title combines close textual analyses of 34 teen romance novels with a school study in 3 US schools.

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