Prime-Time Feminism: Television, Media Culture, and the Women's Movement Since 1970

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University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996 - 240 pages

Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title

Dow discusses a wide variety of television programming and provides specific case studies of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, One Day at a Time, Designing Women, Murphy Brown, and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. She juxtaposes analyses of genre, plot, character development, and narrative structure with the larger debates over feminism that took place at the time the programs originally aired. Dow emphasizes the power of the relationships among television entertainment, news media, women's magazines, publicity, and celebrity biographies and interviews in creating a framework through which television viewers "make sense" of both the medium's portrayal of feminism and the nature of feminism itself.

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Contents

The Rhetoric of Television Criticism
1
Mary Tyler Moore Show
24
The Emerging Woman of One
59
1980s Television Postfeminism
86
Postfeminism Personified
135
Maternal Feminism
164
Feminist Images Feminist Politics
203
References
219
Index
235
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About the author (1996)

Bonnie J. Dow is Assistant Professor of Communication at North Dakota State University.

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