Expressions of Blame
Details
The Daily Express reporting of battered women who kill uses framing borrowed from popular crime entertainment, which has included melodramatic theatre and silent film, clue-puzzle novels, film noir and reality-crime television. Its representations of the guilt or innocence of the women are shaped by these stories, which accord with the newspaper s political views and express its gender politics. It has preserved conservative, traditional ideologies of womanhood to the extent that the ''virgin-victim'' is held as a virtuous figure at both ends of the century. It has supported anti-feminist discourse during both first- and second-wave feminist movements, circulating anti-feminist and traditionally gendered images that are viewed from the male gaze. The permanence of this male gaze and the close relationship between news and entertainment forms suggests that attempts to blame feminisation as a cause of tabloidisation are misapplied and the culprit is instead the drive to entertain for monetary gain.
Autorentext
Her research interests include journalism history, international media, crime and gender in the media. She was awarded her doctorate from Cardiff University School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies. She currently researches comparisons between coverage of the suffragettes and the Greenham Common women.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783639192575
- Sprache Englisch
- Größe H220mm x B220mm
- Jahr 2009
- EAN 9783639192575
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- ISBN 978-3-639-19257-5
- Titel Expressions of Blame
- Autor J. Sadie Clifford
- Untertitel Narratives of Battered Women Who Kill in the Twentieth Century Daily Express
- Herausgeber VDM Verlag Dr. Müller e.K.
- Anzahl Seiten 304
- Genre Politikwissenschaft