Becoming a Woman Through RomanceUsing approaches from feminism and cultural studies, this work explores the contradictory role that popular culture plays in the construction of gender, class, race, age, and sexual meanings. Christian-Smith dissects the conservative political themes underlying thirty-four teen romance novels, demonstrating how their flowery versions of romance and femininity actually inscribe white middle class gender ideology and class tensions. |
Contents
The Code of Romance | 16 |
The Code of Sexuality | 30 |
The Code of Beautification | 43 |
Copyright | |
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actions adolescent romance fiction adult analysis Angie Morrow aspects beauty becomes black women Bo Jo Jones Booklist Boy Next Door boyfriends California Girl Chapter characters Christian-Smith classroom codes of romance consumption discussion domestic dominant Donelson & Nilsen femininity feminist Francine Pascal gender relations girlfriend heroine's heroines heterosexual High School Library Hornbook housework ideology important involves kiss Kliatt literature lives Ludell and Willie Maddy meaning narrative P.S. I Love Paintbox Summer period 2 novels political popular culture Practically Seventeen Princess Amy publishing relationship represent role romance novels romance reading Ruby sample of thirty-four Schechter & Bogart School Library Catalogue School Library Journal selection guides semiotics Senior High School series romances Seth's Room Seventeenth Summer sexuality Sherwood Park social structure struggles Sweet Valley High teachers teen romance fiction teenage tensions texts textual tion traditional twenty-nine girls wage Wait for Marcy working-class Young Adult Literature