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Since the early 2000s, Disney Channel has been dominated by
original live-action programming popular among tween girls. The
shows' successes rely not only on their popularity among girl
audiences, but also on the development of star personae by girl
performers, such as Raven-Symone, Miley Cyrus, and Selena Gomez. In
addition, these programs and their performers have spawned
lucrative media and merchandising franchises for the Walt Disney
Company. This book includes analyses of this Disney Channel
programming, as well as Disney corporate reports and executive
statements, together with Disney Channel stars' performances,
promotional appearances, media production, philanthropic efforts,
and entrepreneurism. Analyzing these texts, performances,
activities, and personae, it considers the ways in which they
reproduce celebrity, visibility, and feminine performativity as
central to successful twenty-first century girlhood.
Mediated Girlhoods, Volume 2 is an anthology devoted to scholarship
on girls' media culture. Taking a cultural studies approach, it
includes studies of girls' media representations, girls' media
consumption, and girls' media production. In an attempt to push
research on girls' media culture in new directions, it responds to
criticisms of previous research in this field by including studies
of girls who are not white, middle-class, heterosexual, cisgender,
or Western. Approaching girlhood, media, and methodology broadly,
Mediated Girlhoods includes studies of such previously unexplored
topics as girls' mimetic communication via Tumblr, the girlyboy in
independent Filipino cinema, Qatari girls' film production, trans
girlhood in advertising, Canadian girls' feminist activism, and the
new girl subject imagined in Disney's Cinderella (2015). Mediated
Girlhoods, Volume 2 is appropriate for undergraduate- and
graduate-level courses, particularly graduate seminars exploring
girlhood, media, and culture; youth media; youth cultures; and
gender and media; and undergraduate courses housed within the
following departments: media studies, communication studies,
cultural studies, women's and gender studies, sociology,
literature, history, education, and psychology.
Since the early 2000s, Disney Channel has been dominated by
original live-action programming popular among tween girls. The
shows' successes rely not only on their popularity among girl
audiences, but also on the development of star personae by girl
performers, such as Raven-Symone, Miley Cyrus, and Selena Gomez. In
addition, these programs and their performers have spawned
lucrative media and merchandising franchises for the Walt Disney
Company. This book includes analyses of this Disney Channel
programming, as well as Disney corporate reports and executive
statements, together with Disney Channel stars' performances,
promotional appearances, media production, philanthropic efforts,
and entrepreneurism. Analyzing these texts, performances,
activities, and personae, it considers the ways in which they
reproduce celebrity, visibility, and feminine performativity as
central to successful twenty-first century girlhood.
Mediated Girlhoods, Volume 2 is an anthology devoted to scholarship
on girls' media culture. Taking a cultural studies approach, it
includes studies of girls' media representations, girls' media
consumption, and girls' media production. In an attempt to push
research on girls' media culture in new directions, it responds to
criticisms of previous research in this field by including studies
of girls who are not white, middle-class, heterosexual, cisgender,
or Western. Approaching girlhood, media, and methodology broadly,
Mediated Girlhoods includes studies of such previously unexplored
topics as girls' mimetic communication via Tumblr, the girlyboy in
independent Filipino cinema, Qatari girls' film production, trans
girlhood in advertising, Canadian girls' feminist activism, and the
new girl subject imagined in Disney's Cinderella (2015). Mediated
Girlhoods, Volume 2 is appropriate for undergraduate- and
graduate-level courses, particularly graduate seminars exploring
girlhood, media, and culture; youth media; youth cultures; and
gender and media; and undergraduate courses housed within the
following departments: media studies, communication studies,
cultural studies, women's and gender studies, sociology,
literature, history, education, and psychology.
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