Authors: Elwood D. Watson
ISBN-13: 9780786425273, ISBN-10: 078642527X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Date Published: June 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Elwood D. Watson is an associate professor in the Department of History at East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, Tennessee.
Ally McBeal, the popular Fox television series (1997-2002), was both groundbreaking and controversial. With its challenging presentation of gender roles and gender politics, the show provided fuel for an ever-expanding international debate over feminism and the roles of women in modern society. In 1998, Time Magazine ran a cover story featuring a photo of the Ally McBeal character alongside three of the feminist movement's most memorable figures. The article was suggestively entitled, "Is Feminism Dead?"
This collection of essays addresses that important question as it relates to the presentation of women's behaviors, desires and images in Ally McBeal. It considers the challenges that women's sexuality presents to feminism and looks at feminist thought regarding female professionalism and contemporary marriage. Also discussed is the struggle for an understanding of masculinity in light of feminism's growing challenge to patriarchy. Other topics include the series' groundbreaking narrative structure, its critique of society and the law in the early 21st century, and its treatment of minority characters. Contrary to the implications of Time Magazine's coverage, this book argues that Ally McBeal is a positive feminist text from the perspective of post-feminist theory.1 | Ally McBeal as a site of postmodern bodily boundaries and struggles over cultural interpretation : the hysteric as a site of feminist resistance | 19 |
2 | A truth universally (un)acknowledged : Ally McBeal, Bridget Jones's diary and the conflict between romantic love and feminism | 36 |
3 | Cultural occupancy, television reception, and multiple identifications in Ally McBeal | 55 |
4 | The comic and burlesque : a frame analysis of post-feminist values and female professionalism in Ally McBeal | 89 |
5 | Ally McBeal and the death of feminism | 104 |
6 | Female representation and the "postfeminist" challenge | 117 |
7 | In Ms. McBeal's defense : assessing Ally McBeal as a feminist text | 139 |
8 | Worshipping at the altar of Barry White : Ally McBeal and racial and sexual politics in crisis | 160 |
9 | The angler, fish, and fishisms : universal themes and contemporary issues in a popular television series | 177 |
10 | It's more than just another silly love song : Ally McBeal brings the Hollywood musical to television | 203 |
11 | Segments in an endless flow : narrative gaps and partial closure in Ally McBeal | 224 |