194 research outputs found
Review: 'Girlfriends and Postfeminist Sisterhood' by Alison Winch, Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013, x + 222 pp., AU$91.62 (ebk), ISBN 0230348750
‘Don't let him take Britain back to the 1980s’: Ashes to Ashes as postfeminist recession television
This article interrogates postfeminism and recessionary discourse in the time travel police series Ashes to Ashes (BBC, 2008-2010). Viewing the series as an early example of ‘recession television,’ it explores how the resident gender discourse of postfeminism established in the pre-recession first series, and attendant cultural priorities, shifted over time in tandem with the onset of recession, following the 2008 global financial crisis, and in line with tendencies of emergent recessionary media culture. In early episodes it over-determines the characterization of female detective protagonist Alex Drake as a postfeminist subject, drawing her to well-worn cultural scripts of femininity. Later this gives way to the discursive centralization of her boss, Gene Hunt, already an iconic figurehead of recidivist masculinity from the earlier Life on Mars (BBC, 2006-2007), one of several gendered responses to the drastically changed economic environment in which the series was produced and received
Greer Garson: “The Great Story of a Great Woman!” Gallant ladies, and British wartime femininity
Review: The Television Entrepreneurs: Social Change and Public Understanding of Business by Raymond Boyle and Lisa W Kelly
Friends reconsidered: Cultural politics, intergenerationality, and afterlives
With the passing in 2014 of the twentieth anniversary of its debut episode, the iconic millennial sitcom Friends retains a rare cultural currency and remains a crucial reference point for understanding the concerns of Generation X. This special issue, therefore, interrogates the contemporary and historical significance of Friends as a popular sitcom that reflected and obfuscated American fin de siècle anxieties at the time, and considers the lasting resonance of its cultural afterlife. Its abiding impact as millennial cultural touchstone can be seen in its persistent ability to find new generations of viewers and its manifest influence on myriad extratextual phenomena
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