The Gendered Body in Resistance in Popular Culure: A Critical Reading of Personal Narratives and Blogs
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Department of English
Abstract
This research paper examines popular culture as a site where notion of normative
sexuality and beauty are constructed, modified, and accommodated that creates
space for resistance against such practices. For this purpose, the paper studies two
memoirs: Victorie Dauxerree's Size Zero: How I Survived My Life as a Model,
Lindy West's Shrill: Notes from a Loud Woman; and selections from two blog,
Aviva Dove-Viebahn's Ms. Magazine and Caitlin Lansin's About Face. In a
capitalist patriarchy, Zillah Eisenstein looks at women's position in contemporary
culture from a dual stand point in that she locates the roots of existing notions of
normative female sexuality in capitalism and patriarchy. Along Eisenstein's line,
Mulvey's "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" examines the cinematic
representation of the erotic female in the culture industry’s commodification of the
gendered body in the capitalist-patriarchy. Likewise, Storey proposes two divergent
functions of popular culture: the product of commodified practices made available
by the culture industry and the practice in resistance to the dominant world values.
These distinct perspectives of looking at popular culture will help us unfold
resistance voices engaged in production, distribution and consumption of popular
texts. Such an in–depth examination of the gendered body in the marketplace in
popular personal narratives unravels as well as challenges the deeply-ingrained
gender stereotypes and suppression existing in the capitalist patriarchy.
Keywords: Popular Culture, Capitalism, Patriarchy, Representation, Resistance