Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
HBO’s Girls first aired in 2012, and the contributors to this volume examine the show’s first three seasons and analyze popular discourse surrounding creator Lena Dunham. Girls is both acclaimed and panned in popular media, and the contributors tease out debates over the show’s feminism and its identity and body politics. Two of the strongest essays, Jocelyn Bailey's 'The Body Police' and Maria San Filippo's 'Owning Her Abjection,' focus on discourse about Dunham’s body (both on screen and off) and do a good job of blending theory and textual analysis. Other essays focus on how Girls treats race, music, class, and millennial struggle and privilege. Elwood Watson is deft in critiquing the show’s racial politics and lack of diversity. Fans and critics of the show’s male characters (particularly Adam and Ray) will also find more than enough to ponder in this book. Though there is a tendency across the essays to focus on the same episodes ('One Man’s Trash' and 'Vagina Panic,' for example), readers can forgive the repetition because it comes with smart commentary. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. * CHOICE *
The essays in this collection are frank and fearless critiques of Girls and its impact on popular culture. The writers in this book examine the show’s use and misuse of topics such as race, the body, and the media’s sexualization of women. Kudos to Watson, Mitchell, and Shaw for editing this timely book. -- Heather Marcovitch, co-editor of Mad Men, Women, and Children: Essays on Gender and Generation
The HBO TV series Girls invites viewers into a world fueled by narcissism and entitlement, creativity and individualism, (bad) sex and fairytale romance, racial isolation and millennial liberalism. HBO's Girls and the Awkward Politics of Gender, Race, and Privilege's essays present trenchant analyses into how Girls lays bare the reformation of feminism and American Dream ideals. This book is a perceptive interrogation into popular culture and shifting generational mores.” -- Robin R. Means Coleman, University of Michigan
The time is ripe for such a multifaceted and provocative collection of essays dedicated to Girls. While debates about the show and the issues it brings up have often been polarizing, this book powerfully establishes how and why such conversations matter. -- Tahneer Oksman, author of "How Come Boys Get to Keep Their Noses?": Women and Jewish American Identity in Contemporary Graphic Memoirs

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements Introduction Reading Into Girls, Writing What We Read Elwood Watson, Jennifer Mitchell and Marc E. Shaw Chapter 1 She's Just Not That Into You: Dating, Damage and Gender Jennifer Mitchell Chapter 2 The Body Police: Lena Dunham, Susan Bordo and HBO Girls Joycelyn Bailey Chapter 3 Owning Her Abjection: Lena Dunham's Feminist Body Politics Maria San Filippo Chapter 4 Girls' Issues: The Feminist Politics of Girls Celebration of The Trivial Yael Levy Chapter 5 Falling from Pedestals: Dunham’s Cracked Girls and Boys Marc E. Shaw Chapter 6 Capitalizing on Cool: The Music That Makes Girls Hank Willenbrink Chapter 7 Generation X Archtypes and HBO Girls Tom Pace Chapter 8 Reading Girls: Bringing Sexy Back To Girls Laura Witherington Chapter 9 Lena Dunham: The Awkward/Ambiguous Politics of A Millennial White Girl Elwood Watson Chapter 10 Marnye On the Ones and Twos: Appropriating Race, Criticizing Class in Girls Lloyd Isaac Vayo

HBOs Girls and the Awkward Politics of Gender

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    A Hardback by Jennifer Mitchell, Marc Edward Shaw

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 8/27/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498512619, 978-1498512619
      ISBN10: 1498512615

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      HBO’s Girls first aired in 2012, and the contributors to this volume examine the show’s first three seasons and analyze popular discourse surrounding creator Lena Dunham. Girls is both acclaimed and panned in popular media, and the contributors tease out debates over the show’s feminism and its identity and body politics. Two of the strongest essays, Jocelyn Bailey's 'The Body Police' and Maria San Filippo's 'Owning Her Abjection,' focus on discourse about Dunham’s body (both on screen and off) and do a good job of blending theory and textual analysis. Other essays focus on how Girls treats race, music, class, and millennial struggle and privilege. Elwood Watson is deft in critiquing the show’s racial politics and lack of diversity. Fans and critics of the show’s male characters (particularly Adam and Ray) will also find more than enough to ponder in this book. Though there is a tendency across the essays to focus on the same episodes ('One Man’s Trash' and 'Vagina Panic,' for example), readers can forgive the repetition because it comes with smart commentary. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. * CHOICE *
      The essays in this collection are frank and fearless critiques of Girls and its impact on popular culture. The writers in this book examine the show’s use and misuse of topics such as race, the body, and the media’s sexualization of women. Kudos to Watson, Mitchell, and Shaw for editing this timely book. -- Heather Marcovitch, co-editor of Mad Men, Women, and Children: Essays on Gender and Generation
      The HBO TV series Girls invites viewers into a world fueled by narcissism and entitlement, creativity and individualism, (bad) sex and fairytale romance, racial isolation and millennial liberalism. HBO's Girls and the Awkward Politics of Gender, Race, and Privilege's essays present trenchant analyses into how Girls lays bare the reformation of feminism and American Dream ideals. This book is a perceptive interrogation into popular culture and shifting generational mores.” -- Robin R. Means Coleman, University of Michigan
      The time is ripe for such a multifaceted and provocative collection of essays dedicated to Girls. While debates about the show and the issues it brings up have often been polarizing, this book powerfully establishes how and why such conversations matter. -- Tahneer Oksman, author of "How Come Boys Get to Keep Their Noses?": Women and Jewish American Identity in Contemporary Graphic Memoirs

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements Introduction Reading Into Girls, Writing What We Read Elwood Watson, Jennifer Mitchell and Marc E. Shaw Chapter 1 She's Just Not That Into You: Dating, Damage and Gender Jennifer Mitchell Chapter 2 The Body Police: Lena Dunham, Susan Bordo and HBO Girls Joycelyn Bailey Chapter 3 Owning Her Abjection: Lena Dunham's Feminist Body Politics Maria San Filippo Chapter 4 Girls' Issues: The Feminist Politics of Girls Celebration of The Trivial Yael Levy Chapter 5 Falling from Pedestals: Dunham’s Cracked Girls and Boys Marc E. Shaw Chapter 6 Capitalizing on Cool: The Music That Makes Girls Hank Willenbrink Chapter 7 Generation X Archtypes and HBO Girls Tom Pace Chapter 8 Reading Girls: Bringing Sexy Back To Girls Laura Witherington Chapter 9 Lena Dunham: The Awkward/Ambiguous Politics of A Millennial White Girl Elwood Watson Chapter 10 Marnye On the Ones and Twos: Appropriating Race, Criticizing Class in Girls Lloyd Isaac Vayo

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