Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television
This paper will explore the ways in which thrift operates as a signifier of a specific type of lprecarity and imperfection in young women's lives in several popular series associated with the current 'golden age' of women's television production. The twenty-something women of ser...
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Linköping University Electronic Press
2020-01-01
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Series: | Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research |
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.19v11a27 |
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doaj-154514c782bb4e51b8edede1c87634232020-11-25T02:11:45ZengLinköping University Electronic PressCulture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research2000-15252020-01-01113-450151610.3384/cu.2000.1525.19v11a27Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on TelevisionClaire PerkinsThis paper will explore the ways in which thrift operates as a signifier of a specific type of lprecarity and imperfection in young women's lives in several popular series associated with the current 'golden age' of women's television production. The twenty-something women of series including Girls, Insecure, Broad City, Fleabag, Can't Cope Won't Cope and Search Party, have all been raised in comfortable middle-class homes and are now living independently in major global, expensive cities. The precarity of the ways in which they dwell, at both a practical and figurative level, is a symptom of what has come to be understood as 'adulting'-where relatively privileged millennials struggle with the rituals and realities of adult life in a starkly neoliberal society. Through a focus on the narrative device of the apartment plot, this paper will examine how the concept of thrift, with its central spectrum of necessity and choice, can illuminate both the everyday practices and the overarching logic of the adulting phenomenon as represented in this wave of television production. By attending to a variety of contemporary series by, for and about women, it will also argue for the ways in which both thrift and adulting can be understood as specifically gendered behaviours.http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.19v11a27thriftadultingimperfectionapartment plotinsecuregirlsneoliberalism |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Claire Perkins |
spellingShingle |
Claire Perkins Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research thrift adulting imperfection apartment plot insecure girls neoliberalism |
author_facet |
Claire Perkins |
author_sort |
Claire Perkins |
title |
Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television |
title_short |
Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television |
title_full |
Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television |
title_fullStr |
Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television |
title_full_unstemmed |
Thrift, Imperfection and Popular Feminist Apartment Plot on Television |
title_sort |
thrift, imperfection and popular feminist apartment plot on television |
publisher |
Linköping University Electronic Press |
series |
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research |
issn |
2000-1525 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
This paper will explore the ways in which thrift operates as a signifier of a specific type of lprecarity and imperfection in young women's lives in several popular series associated with the current 'golden age' of women's television production. The twenty-something women of series including Girls, Insecure, Broad City, Fleabag, Can't Cope Won't Cope and Search Party, have all been raised in comfortable middle-class homes and are now living independently in major global, expensive cities. The precarity of the ways in which they dwell, at both a practical and figurative level, is a symptom of what has come to be understood as 'adulting'-where relatively privileged millennials struggle with the rituals and realities of adult life in a starkly neoliberal society. Through a focus on the narrative device of the apartment plot, this paper will examine how the concept of thrift, with its central spectrum of necessity and choice, can illuminate both the everyday practices and the overarching logic of the adulting phenomenon as represented in this wave of television production. By attending to a variety of contemporary series by, for and about women, it will also argue for the ways in which both thrift and adulting can be understood as specifically gendered behaviours. |
topic |
thrift adulting imperfection apartment plot insecure girls neoliberalism |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.19v11a27 |
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