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Girls

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The Spice Girls, Tank Girl comicbooks, Sailor Moon, Courtney Love, Grrl Power: do such things really constitute a unique "girl culture?" Catherine Driscoll begins by identifying a genealogy of "gir...
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  • 21 August 2002
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The Spice Girls, Tank Girl comicbooks, Sailor Moon, Courtney Love, Grrl Power: do such things really constitute a unique "girl culture?" Catherine Driscoll begins by identifying a genealogy of "girlhood" or "feminine adolescence," and then argues that both "girls" and "culture" as ideas are too problematic to fulfill any useful role in theorizing about the emergence of feminine adolescence in popular culture. She relates the increasing public visibility of girls in western and westernized cultures to the evolution and expansion of theories about feminine adolescence in fields such as psychoanalysis, sociology, anthropology, history, and politics. Presenting her argument as a Foucauldian genealogy, Driscoll discusses the ways in which young women have been involved in the production and consumption of theories and representations of girls, feminine adolescence, and the "girl market."
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Price: $150.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 21 August 2002
ISBN: 9780231119122
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Children's Studies
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Driscoll discusses the ways in which young women have been involved in the production and consumption of theories and representations of girls, feminine adolescence, and the 'girl market.'
Catherine Driscoll is Senior Lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Adelaide, Australia. She has published essays in various scholarly journals and books, most recently Deleuze and Feminism and South Atlantic Quarterly.

Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Towards a Genealogy of Girlhood
Part I. Becoming a Girl
1. The Girl of the Period
2. Feminine Adolescence
3. Puberty
Part II. Becoming a Woman
4. Daughters: Theories of Girlhood
5. Sex and the Single Girl: Studies in Girlhood
6. Becoming Bride: Girls and Cultural Studies
Part III. Girls and Cultural Production
7. Distraction: Girls and Mass Culture
8. In Visible Bodies
9. The Girl Market and Girl Culture
Conclusion: The Girl of the Century
Notes
Bibliography
Index