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Access all areas: a backstage look at women’s experiences in the West Coast rock music sceneHammond, Leanne 05 1900 (has links)
This study attempts to address a gap in existing
subcultural research. While there has been extensive work
done on the experiences of men in subcultural groupings, the
examination of women's experiences is sadly lacking. Using
a combination of participant observation and ethnographic
interviewing, this study looks at the role women play in the
local rock music scene. Some interesting themes emerge that
challenge existing notions that women are either marginal or
absent from subcultural activity.
Women in the scene occupy a richly contradictory social
position. While they exercise an impressive degree of
sexual and financial autonomy, as illustrated by their
initiation of relationships and breadwinner roles in
partnerships with male musicians, they also adopt many goals
and behaviors typically associated with mainstream
constructions of proper femininty. Women in the rock scene
are seldom performers, instead they are concentrated i n the
role of the "nurturent caretaker" (Cole 1993: 89/90)
allowing the male musicians to retain recognition, prestige
and power in the scene. This construction of the male role
as central reflects the acceptance of patriarchal ideology
in the scene and obscures the contribution of women to the
material maintenance of the subculture.
Women's roles in the scene can be characterized as a
simultaneous acceptance and rejection of mainstream
prescriptions for feminine behavior. While women in the
rock scene are undeniably the focus of much sexual
objectification and exploitation, they cannot be viewed as
either passive or dependent. Women are described by scene
members as sexually powerful decision makers, and although
women's power is cast in disappointingly sexual terms, it is
the active nature of this sexuality that leads me to
describe women not as "passive" sexual objects, but rather
as "active" sexual objects.
Women's experiences in the rock scene are inextricably
linked to heterosexual relations with male musicians. While
rock women focus on the same goals of marriage and
motherhood as mainstream women, their relationships are
characterized by complications imposed by the rock
lifestyle. According female participants, the overt
sexuality of the scene, lack of financial stability , and the
consuming nature of the music business combine to challenge
the maintenance of a healthy relationship with a musician.
However, while women's willingness to deal with such
obstacles is puzzling, it can be seen as determination to
transcend traditional limitations on masculine and feminine
roles. The rock scene, despite its disproportionate
consequences for women, offers both women and men
alternatives to mainstream constructions of masculinity and
femininity. The scene is identified by both female and male
participants as offering excitement, spontaneity and passion
absent in mainstream society. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate
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African American female adolescents and rap music video's image of women : attitudes and perceptionsBryant, Yaphet Urie January 1997 (has links)
The present study sought to answer the following questions: Is there a correlation between time spent watching rap music videos and and perception of the imagery of women in rap music videos shown? 2) Is there a correlation between the perception of the imagery of women in rap music videos and their attitudes toward women? There were a total of 53 AAFA who participated in the study. The participants completed the Background Questionnaire and Attitude Toward Women Scale for Adolescents (AWSA). They then viewed approximately 10 minutes of rap music videos that portrayed women negatively, and completed the Opinions on Music Videos survey and the General Questions about Rap Music survey. The data were analyzed with two crosstabs matching time spent watching rap music videos per week with feelings about images of women in rap videos shown, and acceptance of images of women in rap videos shown. A t-test was used to compare AWSA scores and acceptance of images of women in rap music videos shown. A one-way ANOVA was used to compare AWSA scores and feelings about women in rap music videos shown. The results of the study suggest that the more time spent watching rap videos, the less likely the participants would accept the negative images of women in these videos as negative and vice versa. No relationship was found between time spent watching rap videos and feelings about the images portrayed. Regardless of the participant's AWSA score, it did not correlate with her perceptions of the images of women in rap music videos shown. Implications for research and practice were then discussed. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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Sexist Language in the Popular Lyrics of the SeventiesTeague, Carolyn 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study has been to analyze the language of the popular lyrics of the seventies to determine if sexism is used to communicate in various musical genres. Three manifestations of sexist language developed by the Sexism in Textbooks Committee of Women at Scott, Foresman have been used in this study. The lyrics analyzed include 100 lyrics selected from songwriter-singers noted as articulate musical artists of the seventies, 90 songs reaching the "Top Ten" charts (1970-1978), and the top 100 songs of 1978. Chapter I defines sexism and explains three manifestations of sexist language. Chapter II includes examples from seven talented lyricists which illustrate sexism. Chapter III presents an evaluation of sexism in the "Top Ten" lyrics (1970-1978). Chapter IV reveals changes in stereotypic language appearing in the 1978 top 100 lyrics. Chapter V offers summaries and reasons for the findings.
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The Attitudes of Edward Bok and the Ladies' Home Journal Toward Woman's Role in Society, 1889-1919Hummel, Michael D. (Michael Dennis) 08 1900 (has links)
Edward William Bok, the Ladies' Home Journal's editor from 1889 to 1919, remained a confirmed proponent of Victorian womanhood. Yet, dramatic changes in American society made his perceptions increasingly anachronistic and, recognizing this, he reluctantly permitted his magazine's portrayal of woman to change with the times. The first part of the dissertation examines Edward Bok's Victorian attitudes toward woman's role in society. According to him, woman's intellectual, emotional, and physical inferiority and her moral and intuitional superiority harmonize perfectly to define a special sphere for her--the home—where she fulfills her roles as wife, mother, and homemaker. Outside the home, Bok permitted only a narrow range of activity for woman—church and club activities and even employment outside the home if finances required it. The second part of the dissertation illustrates how the Journal's image of woman changed during Bok's tenure, especially during the second decade of the twentieth century. At the outset, all departments of the Journal reinforced the editor's concept of woman, but by the time Edward Bok retired, in 1919. the magazine's image of woman contrasted sharply with Bo'k's personal views.
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Deconstruction of the Disney Princess EmpireCheang, I Ian January 2006 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities / Department of Communication
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Islands of eight-million smiles : pop-idol performances and the field of symbolic productionAoyagi, Hiroshi 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation focuses on the production and development of a conspicuous, widespread
culture phenomenon in contemporary Japan, which is characterized by numerous young, mediapromoted
personalities, or pop-idols, who are groomed for public consumption. The research,
based on eighteen months of in-depth fieldwork in the Japanese entertainment industry, aims to
contribute to the understanding of the allegorical role played by pop-idols in the creation of
youth culture. Pop-idols are analyzed as personified symbols that function as vehicles of
cultural production. The principal issues suggested in this research include: the criteria of popidol
production; the ways in which pop-idols are produced; the perceptions of pop-idol
performances by producers, performers, and consumers; the ways in which idol personalities are
differentiated from each other; the ways in which pop-idol performances are distinguished from
other styles or genres; and the social, cultural, political, economic, and historical roots as well
as consequences of pop-idols' popularity. These issues are explored through the examination of
female pop-idols.
The single, most important function of pop-idols is to represent young people's fashions,
customs, and lifestyles. To this end, the pop-idol industry generates a variety of styles that can
provide the young audience with pathways toward appropriate adulthood. They do this within
their power structure as well as their commercial interest to capitalize on adolescence - which
in Japan is considered the period in which individuals are expected to explore themselves in the
adult social world. The stylized promotion, practiced differently by promotion agencies that
strive to merchandise pop-idol images and win public recognition, constitutes a field of
symbolic contestation. The stage is thus set for an investigation of the strategies, techniques,
and processes of adolescent identity formation as reified in the construction of idol
personalities.
This dissertation offers a contextualized account of dialogue that occurs between capitalism,
particular rhetoric of self-making, and the lifestyle of consumers, mediated by pop-idols and
their manufacturing agencies that function together as the cultural apparatus. The analysis
developed in this dissertation hopes to provide theoretical and methodological contributions to
the study of celebrities in other social, cultural, and historical settings.
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Characterization of popular culture icons in LIFE and TIME magazinesStanley, Marshica. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2008. / Directed by Rebecca Adams; submitted to Dept. of Sociology. Title from PDF t.p. (viewed Aug. 14, 2009). Includes bibliographical references (p. 137-143).
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Consuming modernity : media's role in normalizing women's labor in India and Thailand /Libby, Caitlin A. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis -- Departmental honors in Women's Studies. / Bibliography: ℓ. 84-87.
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Unpacking heat : women and guns in popular culture /Edwards, Marlo. O'Brien, Susie. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--McMaster University, 2005. / Advisor: Susie O'Brien. Includes bibliographical references (p. 250-262). Also available via World Wide Web.
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Making sense of Men's Health: an investigation into the meanings men and women make of Men's HealthMcCance-Price, Maris January 2006 (has links)
This study investigates the popular pleasures produced by readers of men's magazines, focusing primarily on the publication, Men's Health, which represents a new type of magazine catering for men. Using qualitative research methods such as textual analysis and reception analysis, the study explores the pleasures produced by both men and women from the consumption of such texts. The theoretical perspective of cultural studies informs this project, an approach that focuses on the generation and circulation of meanings in society. Focusing on the notion of the active audience and Hall's encoding/decoding model, this study examines readers' interpretations of the Men's Health text, focusing on the moment of consumption in the circuit of culture. Reception theory proposes the existence of "clustered readings" produced by interpretive communities that are socially rather than individually constructed. As a critical ethnography, the study interrogates these meanings with particular reference to questions of gender relations and power in society. Access to different discourses is structured by the social position of readers within relations of power and this study takes gender as a structuring principle. Therefore, this study also explores the particular discursive practices through which masculine and feminine imagery is produced by the Men's Health text and by its readers. The research findings support the more limited notion of the active audience espoused by theorists such as Hall (1980) offering further evidence to suggest that readers produce readings other than those preferred by the text and that therein lies the pleasure of the text for male and female readers. The research concludes that the popularity of Men's Health derives from the capacity of its readers to make multiple meanings of the text.
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