Scholars are revisiting the history of feminist activism and
organizations, mining it for a revisionist, grassroots gender
politics in the South. Why Any Woman advances this line of
historical inquiry by focusing on one of the most productive sites
of late twentieth-century southern feminisms: popular culture by
and about southern women. The nature of popular culture is such
that the challenges it poses to the gendered and racial order, for
instance, are likely to be consumed—privately, in theaters or at
home, alone or with friends or family—by more people than would
ever read a feminist manifesto, attend a civil rights
demonstration, or lobby a legislator for change. In the cultural
desert of the late twentieth-century, pre-internet South, during a
time in which there were fewer avenues of activism and organizing,
other sources of feminism predominated, and pop culture is where
many of us turned for guidance, for role models, and—whether or
notwe knew it—for consciousness-raising. In a region and during a
time of neoconservative backlash in which women’s liberation was
under attack, southern women’s pop culture offered a bridge
between the second and third "waves" of feminism and a major
challenge to contemporary antifeminist forces. Why Any Woman
examines key texts by and about southern women—the play Crimes of
the Heart, the novels The Color Purple and Ugly Ways, the films
Thelma and Louise and Beloved, the television shows Designing Women
and The Oprah Winfrey Show—as a means of understanding the role
of regional popular culture in defining and redefining American
feminisms as we approached the twenty-first century. Taken as a
collective, these texts expand how we think about the whats,
wheres, whens, and hows of feminisms in recent U.S. history. "Why
any woman give a shit what people think is a mystery to me," muses
the blueswoman Shug Avery in Alice Walker's The Color Purple. Why
Any Woman features southerners who, like Shug, rejected and
reshaped gender norms, and their stories illustrate some of the
ways regional pop culture has been and still isa crucial site of
American feminisms.
General
Imprint: |
University of Georgia Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
November 2023 |
Authors: |
Keira V. Williams
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
277 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8203-6556-5 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-8203-6556-4 |
Barcode: |
9780820365565 |
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