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Lives together/worlds apart : mothers and daughters in popular culture / / Suzanna Danuta Walters [[electronic resource]]



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Autore: Walters Suzanna Danuta Visualizza persona
Titolo: Lives together/worlds apart : mothers and daughters in popular culture / / Suzanna Danuta Walters [[electronic resource]] Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Berkeley, : University of California Press, 1992
Edizione: First Paperback Printing 1994, Reprint 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (xiii, 295 p. ) : ill. ;
Disciplina: 306.874/3
Soggetto topico: Mothers and daughters
Women in popular culture
Mothers and daughters - United States
Nota di bibliografia: Filmography: p. 277-279.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 253-276) and index.
Nota di contenuto: The Sacrament of Separation / The Penance of Affiliation: On the Subject of Mothers and Daughters -- From Sacrificial Stella to Maladjusted Mildred: De(class)ifying Mothers and Daughters -- Father Knows Best about the Woman Question: Familial Harmony and Feminine Containment -- The Turning Point: Mothers and Daughters at the Birth of Second-Wave Feminism -- Terms of Enmeshment: Feminist Discourses of Mothers and Daughters -- Parting Glances: Feminist Images of Mothers and Daughters -- Whose Life Is It Anyway? Fatal Retractions in the Backlash Eighties -- Beyond Separation: Located Lives and Situated Tales.
Sommario/riassunto: In the 1940's film Now, Voyager, Bette Davis plays a daughter struggling against her mother's stifling repression. Nearly fifty years later, in the Hollywood saga Postcards from the Edge, Shirley MacLaine, as a neglectful and bossy mother, inflicts untold psychological pain on her daughter, played by Meryl Streep. These dramas of conflict and the ambivalent struggle for separation have been central to popular images of mothers and daughters in the last half-century in the U.S. Walters boldly challenges these dichotomies and proposes an innovative and multilayered understanding of the cultural construction of the mother/daughter relationship. In a discussion of popular media ranging from themes of maternal martyrdom to maternal malevolence, Walters shows that since World War II, mainstream culture has generally represented the mother/daughter relationship as one of never-ending conflict and thus promoted an "ideology of separation" as necessary to the daughter's emancipation and maturity. This ideological move is placed in a social context of the anti-woman backlash of the early post-war period and the renewed anti-feminism of the Reagan and Bush years. Walters uses exceptions to mainstream imagery-films such as A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, television shows like "Maude," novels like The Joy Luck Club-to offer evidence of alternative traditions and paradigms. Timely and vividly argued, Lives Together/Worlds Apart makes a brilliant contribution to discussions of popular culture and feminism.
Titolo autorizzato: Lives together  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 0-520-91503-8
0-585-28912-3
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910496151403321
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