Lexington Books
Pages: 216
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-7698-6 • Hardback • July 2012 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-8869-9 • Paperback • October 2013 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-7699-3 • eBook • July 2012 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Theresa Carilli is professor of communication at Purdue University Calumet.
Jane Campbell is professor of English at Purdue University Calumet.
Introduction
Part 1. Reinscribing Women’s Roles
Chapter 1. Feeling Good Never Looked Better: Examining Representations of Women in Special K Advertisements
By Vanessa Reimer and Rukhsana Ahmed
Chapter 2. Tales from the Oh-Oku: The Shogun’s Inner Palace and The Outer (Mediated) World
By Kimiko Akita
Chapter 3. Pakistani Media and Disempowerment of Women
By Saman Talib and Zara Idrees
Chapter 4. Women in Film . . . Treading Water but fit for the Marathon
By Lisa French
Part 2. Political Issues
Chapter 5. Mass Media Explain the Global Sex Trade
By Anne Johnston, Barbara Friedman, and Autumn Shafer
Chapter 6. Gendered Construction of Illness: A Post-Structuralist Critique of Gardasil
By Nicole Defenbaugh and Kimberly Kline
Chapter 7. Who’s Afraid of the Pink Chaddi?: New Media, Hindutva, and Feminist Agency in India
By Saayan Chattopadhyay
Part 3. Westernizing Women
Chapter 8. Representation of the Modern Chinese Woman in a Discourse of Consumerism
By Wei Luo
Chapter 9. From “Babushki” to “Sexy Babes”: The Sexing-up of Women in Bulgarian Advertising
By Elza Ibroscheva
Part 4. Political Individuals
Chapter 10. Dorothy Jurney, Fran Harris, and Professional Journalist Networks
By Steven Carl Smith
Chapter 11. The Media Manipulation of Angela Merkel
By Lynn Kutch
Chapter 12. All Hail the Queen: The Metamorphosis or Selling out of Queen Latifah
By Elizabeth Johnson
Chapter 13. 18,000,000 Cracks or How Hillary Almost Became President
By Lori Montalbano
Part 5. Reflective Essays
Chapter 14. Big, Black, Boisterous Badasses: Why Queen-Sized African American Women are Never Really Royalty
By Deatra Sullivan-Morgan
Chapter 15. Lesbian Comics: Negotiating Queer Visibility
By Theresa Carilli
Media representations of women proliferate around the world in an ever more confusing jumble of images ranging from sexualized commodities—both feared and revered—to legitimate political candidates, including antiquated villains that rewrite women’s history. In this volume of carefully selected essays by global scholars, Carilli and Campbell unmask the assertions and demands that such disjointed depictions make on the lives and well-being of real women. But this essential book also illustrates the ways in which women continue to reclaim their own voices, images, desires and power, and in doing so reaffirm our collective humanity.
— Robin Andersen, Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Fordham University, New York City
In their edited volume Women in the Media (2005), Carilli and Campbell (respectively, communication and English, Purdue Univ., Calumet) argued that global images of women in the media are problematical. The 15 essays in the present work reexamine the status of women in/on the media, also concluding that although images of women have changed as the second decade of the new millennium continues, presentations of women are more ambiguous than ever. Global media abound with images of woman as powerless and with harmful stereotypes about women's bodies and behavior. North Americans already know this is the case in their own media, but they have little exposure to depictions of women in media beyond North America. These essays provide valuable insight into ways in which foreign media sources have shifted from matronly to sexy depictions. This comes in tandem with the decline of state-sponsored maternity leave, child care, and abortion services. Also examined is global news media's difficulty in covering stories involving world figures like Angela Merkel and Hillary Clinton. The study ends with fresh, "reflective" essays on positive images in North American media of full-figured black women and lesbian comics, suggesting that these women become "guides for a new feminist frontier." Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
In whole, Carilli’s and Campbell’s edited volume is undoubtedly a thought-provoking selection of essays. It provides stable theoretical frameworks and methodological platforms from where to examine a wide range of representations, pointing persistently at the need to debunk harmful and unrighteous perceptions about women. Above all and more than an important contribution to scholarship, Challenging Images of Women in the Media, offers a fertile ground for diverse discussions on how women’s lives may get better perceived and re-invented.
— Women's Studies International Forum