Image for Tweenhood: femininity and celebrity in tween popular culture

Tweenhood: femininity and celebrity in tween popular culture

Part of the Library of Gender and Popular Culture series
See all formats and editions

A powerful female, pre-adolescent, consumer demographic has emerged in tandem with girls becoming more visible in popular culture since the 1990s. Yet the cultural anxiety that this has caused has received scant academic attention. In Tweenhood, Melanie Kennedy rectifies this and examines mainstream, pre-adolescent girls' films, television programmes and celebrities from 2004 onwards, including A Cinderella Story (2004), Hannah Montana (2006) and Camp Rock (2008). Her book forges a dialogue between post-feminism, film and television, celebrity and most importantly; the figure of the tween. Kennedy examines how these media texts, which are so key to tween culture, address and construct their target audience by helping them to 'choose' an appropriately feminine identity. Tweenhood then, she argues, is transient and a discursive construct whose unpacking highlights the deification of celebrity and femininity within its culture.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£90.00
Product Details
I. B. Tauris
1788316649 / 9781788316644
eBook (EPUB)
30/10/2018
United Kingdom
English
256 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on print version record.