Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Redesigning Women: Television After the Network Era
In her record book, Redesigning Women: Television afterward the Network Era, Amanda Lotz explores the depiction of one female characters on boob tube and what she announces the red-hot fair sex. Published in 2006, Lotzs examination of the sore char muliebrity is defined by many characteristics, including an emphasis on independence, successfulness, and dating. Now, almost ten historic period after Lotzs book was first published, the modernistic adult female can still be seen on television entirely with some notable evolutions. In recent years, the TV serial publication Girls and roomy metropolis energise premiered, giving voice to a completely sunrise(prenominal) institute newfangled char, whom I will call the newest woman. In my examination of the newest woman I will work the pilot episodes of both bounteous urban warmheartedness and Girls to explore the new and old ways in which this newest woman has manifested. While this newest woman shares some characteris tics with Lotzs new woman, she appears to be even younger, to a greater extent sexually enlightened, and struggling to a greater extent fully under the burden of her independence. In order to sample this transformation, I will be comparing and contrasting ternary specific aspects of Lotzs new woman to the newest woman found in Girls and Broad City: her career or sailplaning of independence and her sexuality.\nNew woman characters throughout television recital primarily have been one girls, young women who seek jobs in the city prior to spousal relationship (Lotz 88). The series Broad City and Girls share some similarities with this new woman: both shows center around a gathering of primarily single women in their twenties living in New York City. Thus, like Lotzs new woman, these single women alike pursue lives within a metropolis setting. While unmarried, Lotzs new woman is pictured as a successfully independent career woman in her early thirties (90). In both Girls and Br oad City, however, the newest woman differs from the new...
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