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Supergirl scorned : lessons about young femininity in an Australian television satire

Abstract

In this paper I explore the popular Australian television character of Ja&rsquo;mie King &ndash; a teenage private school girl created and performed by male comedian Chris Lilley. I conceptualise Lilley&rsquo;s satire as a public pedagogy of young femininity. My reading of his satire responds to recent feminist scholarship around young femininities and &lsquo;girl power&rsquo;, which explores representations of young femininity in popular culture in Western nations. Drawing primarily on the 2005 television mockumentary We can be heroes, I explore how King can be read in terms of exaggerated &lsquo;girl power&rsquo; subjectivity. I examine the relationships, fashioned through the character of King, between &lsquo;sexuality&rsquo; and global citizenship activity. I consider the extent to which King&rsquo;s character teaches that young women can &lsquo;have it all&rsquo;. I explore the extent to which her character teaches that they can be &lsquo;beautiful&rsquo; and &lsquo;brainy&rsquo;, &lsquo;self-determined&rsquo; and &lsquo;sexy&rsquo; at the same time.<br /

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