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Feel-Bad Postfeminism
Impasse, Resilience and Female Subjectivity in Popular Culture
Feel-Bad Postfeminism
Impasse, Resilience and Female Subjectivity in Popular Culture
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Description
In Feel-Bad Postfeminism, Catherine McDermott provides crucial insight into what growing up during empowerment postfeminism feels like, and outlines the continuing postfeminist legacy of resilience in girlhood coming-of-age narratives.
McDermott's analysis of Gone Girl (2012), Girls (2012–2017) and Appropriate Behaviour (2012) illuminates a major cultural turn in which the pleasures of postfeminist empowerment curdle into a profound sense of rage and resentment. By contrast, close examination of The Hunger Games (2008–2010), Girlhood (2014) and Catch Me Daddy (2014) reveals that contemporary genres are increasingly constructing girls as uniquely capable of resiliently overcoming and adapting to unforgiving social conditions.
She develops an affective vocabulary to better understand contemporary modes of defiant, transformative and relational resilience, as well as a framework through which to expand on further modes that are specific to the genres they emerge within. Overall, the book suggests that exploration of the affective dimensions of girls' and women's culture can offer new insights into how coming-of-age, girlhood and femininity are culturally produced in the aftermath of postfeminism.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Impasse
1. Feel-Bad Postfeminism in Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl
2. Postfeminist Impasse and Cruel Optimism in Lena Dunham's Girls
3. 'Being without a cliché to hold onto can be a lonely experience': Generic Isolation in Appropriate Behaviour
Part II: Resilience
4. Suffering, Resilience and Defiance in The Hunger Games
5. Relationality and Transformation in Girlhood
6. Feel-Bad Femininity in Catch Me Daddy
Conclusion
References
Index
Product details

Published | 28 Dec 2023 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 280 |
ISBN | 9781350326712 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 24 bw illus |
Dimensions | 216 x 138 mm |
Series | Library of Gender and Popular Culture |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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