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This book explores the meanings and practices of vintage lives. It
focuses on the non-mainstream subculture of vintage clothes and
lifestyle, specifically that of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, and
asks how those engaged in the culture place themselves within the
gendered and classed contexts of these eras. As a result, it also
identifies the tensions involved in these identities connected to a
past that offered little gain for women and narrow gender roles for
both women and men. Modern Vintage Homes & Leisure Lives is
based on original empirical international data about a group of
people who wear vintage clothing all of the time and whose homes
are styled entirely, or almost entirely, vintage. It aims to
understand the meanings of vintage for them through their daily
practices and accrued knowledge. Through interviews and direct
observations of vintage events it also explores questions about the
acquisition, display and curation of vintage clothes, homes and
objects, about glamour and wardrobes, about the history of
second-hand markets, and emotional durability and ideas about
ghosts, hauntings and spectral remains. It will be of particular
interest to students and academics of gender and women's studies,
fashion and design, fashion history, cultural studies, the body and
embodiment.
Imagine a world where the oppressive, over-feminized images of
women from advertising, television, films, and magazines have
re-armed themselves with army boots, body modifications, and
flamboyant hair. Is this just another fairy tale, and if so, why
cant it be a reality? In Alternative Femininities, Samantha Holland
unpacks the myth of model womanhood and considers how a particular
group of real women define and practise femininity. These women,
who see themselves as 'alternative', modify and subvert popular
images of femininity. The choices they make in clothing, appearance
and body modifications enable them to construct a personal look
that is intimately tied to self-identity. Getting the balance right
between over-femininity and not being feminine enough is a
frequently voiced concern. Holland also addresses head-on the
much-neglected issue of how ageing impacts on notions of
femininity. What do these women think about fashion, gender and
appearance as they grow older and less visible in our
media-dominated society? Do they choose to tone down or stay out
there, and what motivates their choice? A revealing look at
contemporary femininity, Alternative Femininities gives voice to a
previously silent group of women who struggle to resist sexist
gender stereotypes, yet age with style, individuality and
creativity. By looking at how real women negotiate self-image in an
increasingly appearance-conscious society, Holland has provided a
much-needed corrective to theoretical accounts of gender and
femininity lacking in real data.
The body is a physical entity and a symbolic artifact. It is both
created in the world of nature and also physically reconstructed by
a culture. The body is both an internal, subjective environment and
simultaneously an object for others to observe and evaluate. Bodily
practices, woven within a dense web of social relationships, are
then both individual and collective- the individual body expresses
cultural values, rules, and regulations in the daily routine of
living. The American Body in Context: An Anthology is an
interdisciplinary investigation of these body relationships,
examining the American historical and contemporary constructions of
the body. Through readings and exercises, this new book allows
readers to explore interrelationships between the individualized
and the constructed nature of embodied experiences. This
comprehensive text draws together a wide variety of analyses and
demonstrates the interdependence between the individual and the
structural (re)productions of embodied experiences in the U.S. This
is an excellent text for courses in American studies, American
society, cultural and social anthropology, and gender studies.
Alternativity delineates those spaces, scenes, club-cultures,
objects and practices in modern society that are considered to be
actively designed to be counter or resistive to mainstream popular
culture. The idea of the alternative in popular culture became
mainstream with the rise of the counter culture in 1960s America
(though there were earlier forms of alternative cultures in America
and other Western countries). Alternativity is associated with
marginalization, both actively pursued by individuals, and imposed
on individuals and sub-cultures, and was originally represented and
constructed through acts of transgression, and through shared
sub-cultural capital. This edited collection maps the landscape of
alternativity and marginalization, providing new theory and methods
in a currently under-theorized area, setting out the issues,
questions, concerns and directions of this area of study. It
demonstrates the theoretical richness and empirical diversity of
the interdisciplinary field it encompasses, and is deliberately
feminist in its approach and its composition, with a majority of
the contributors being women. Divided into three sub-sections,
focused on sub-cultures, bodies and spaces, contributors explore
this exciting new terrain, both through critiques of theory and new
theoretical developments, and case studies of alternativity and
marginalization in practice and in performance, expanding our
understanding of the alternative, the liminal and the
transgressive.
This book explores the meanings and practices of vintage lives. It
focuses on the non-mainstream subculture of vintage clothes and
lifestyle, specifically that of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, and
asks how those engaged in the culture place themselves within the
gendered and classed contexts of these eras. As a result, it also
identifies the tensions involved in these identities connected to a
past that offered little gain for women and narrow gender roles for
both women and men. Modern Vintage Homes & Leisure Lives is
based on original empirical international data about a group of
people who wear vintage clothing all of the time and whose homes
are styled entirely, or almost entirely, vintage. It aims to
understand the meanings of vintage for them through their daily
practices and accrued knowledge. Through interviews and direct
observations of vintage events it also explores questions about the
acquisition, display and curation of vintage clothes, homes and
objects, about glamour and wardrobes, about the history of
second-hand markets, and emotional durability and ideas about
ghosts, hauntings and spectral remains. It will be of particular
interest to students and academics of gender and women's studies,
fashion and design, fashion history, cultural studies, the body and
embodiment.
The horror genre will always remain current because it reflects our
anxieties, shining a light onto our worst fears whilst creating
worlds defined by darkness. Horror as a genre has always engaged
with era-specific societal mores and moral panics, often about
isolation or abandonment, changing family values and the role of
women. It is often specifically about how gender is constructed in
everyday life. Women are commonly defined in horror by their
passivity, or monstrosity/sexuality or victimhood - or a mix of the
three. At the same time women in horror are forced into
psychological and physical torture ending in violent showdowns in
which they emerge damaged but triumphant. Bringing together
research from a wide range of established and emerging scholars
this edited collection provides an insight into how modern horror
films portray femininities, sexualities, masculinities, ageing, and
other current issues, exploring the use of vampires, zombies,
werewolves and ghosts in films made internationally. This volume,
one of three by the same editorial team examining the horror genre,
focuses on gender and contemporary horror in film, asking questions
about how and if representations of gender in horror have changed.
In these readings and re-readings, the authors examine developments
in films about vampires, zombies, werewolves and ghosts, in films
made internationally.
Contemporary popular media has been marked by its startling ability
to morph into a wide variety of formats, fed by the ongoing
revolution in digital technology. Despite these significant
changes, the horror genre has retained its attraction for
audiences, and the representation of gender has been crucial to
that appeal. Gender and Contemporary Horror in Comic, Games and
Transmedia examines the impact of media convergence on the horror
genre, focusing on comic books and graphic novels, video games,
audio broadcasts, and transmedia adaptations, as well as
considering the increasingly proactive role of audiences in making
media themselves. A wide range of scholars consider the effect of
this new hybridity on established debates regarding the role of
gender in the horror genre, offering vital new interpretations of
identity and representation. This book is an illuminating, exciting
read for academics and students interested in the effect of
changing media, and an evolving cultural landscape, on the
established debates surrounding gender in the horror genre. The
responses of the authors reflect both the possible limitations and
the groundbreaking possibilities of this new era in horror.
The successful return of horror to our television screens in the
post-millennial years, and across a multi-media range of platforms,
demonstrates that this previously moribund genre is once again
vibrant, challenging and long-lasting. The traditional TV audience
of the past would have watched very few horror TV shows, because
not many were made. But that has changed. Programme makers have
tapped into their public's insatiable need - in these days of
terrorism, violence and mayhem - to provide programmes that have
high production values, engaging storylines, and plenty of frights
and gore. Horror TV offers a safety-valve for its audience, one
that enables them to enter into it from the safety of their
armchairs. The era of instant access, streaming, downloading and
binge-watching whole seasons over a weekend, where fandom has
blossomed into a cultural force, clearly shows horror as a vital
part of today's TV scheduling. This edited collection investigates
the rising popularity of horror-television through deconstructing
the gender roles within them via series of case studies including
such programmes as Hannibal, American Horror Story, The Walking
Dead, Penny Dreadful, Supernatural, The Exorcist and Bates Motel.
By using a series of case studies and employing theoretical modes
of close analysis, each chapter demonstrates how and why these TV
shows are important in reflecting the changing gender roles within
modern society.
Imagine a world where the oppressive, over-feminized images of
women from advertising, television, films, and magazines have
re-armed themselves with army boots, body modifications, and
flamboyant hair. Is this just another fairy tale, and if so, why
cant it be a reality? In Alternative Femininities, Samantha Holland
unpacks the myth of model womanhood and considers how a particular
group of real women define and practise femininity. These women,
who see themselves as 'alternative', modify and subvert popular
images of femininity. The choices they make in clothing, appearance
and body modifications enable them to construct a personal look
that is intimately tied to self-identity. Getting the balance right
between over-femininity and not being feminine enough is a
frequently voiced concern. Holland also addresses head-on the
much-neglected issue of how ageing impacts on notions of
femininity. What do these women think about fashion, gender and
appearance as they grow older and less visible in our
media-dominated society? Do they choose to tone down or stay out
there, and what motivates their choice? A revealing look at
contemporary femininity, Alternative Femininities gives voice to a
previously silent group of women who struggle to resist sexist
gender stereotypes, yet age with style, individuality and
creativity. By looking at how real women negotiate self-image in an
increasingly appearance-conscious society, Holland has provided a
much-needed corrective to theoretical accounts of gender and
femininity lacking in real data.
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