The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette
Rachel E. Dubrofsky examines the reality TV series The Bachelor and The Bachelorette in one of the first book-length feminist analysis of the reality TV genre. The research found in The Surveillance of Women on Reality TV: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette meets the growing need for scholarship on the reality genre. This book asks us to be attentive to how the surveillance context of the program impacts gendered and racialized bodies. Dubrofsky takes up issues that cut across the U.S. cultural landscape: the use of surveillance in the creation of entertainment products, the proliferation of public confession and its configuration as a therapeutic tool, the ways in which women's displays of emotion are shown on television, the changing face of popular feminist discourse (notions of choice and empowerment), and the recentering of whiteness in popular media.
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The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette
Rachel E. Dubrofsky examines the reality TV series The Bachelor and The Bachelorette in one of the first book-length feminist analysis of the reality TV genre. The research found in The Surveillance of Women on Reality TV: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette meets the growing need for scholarship on the reality genre. This book asks us to be attentive to how the surveillance context of the program impacts gendered and racialized bodies. Dubrofsky takes up issues that cut across the U.S. cultural landscape: the use of surveillance in the creation of entertainment products, the proliferation of public confession and its configuration as a therapeutic tool, the ways in which women's displays of emotion are shown on television, the changing face of popular feminist discourse (notions of choice and empowerment), and the recentering of whiteness in popular media.
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The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette

The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette

by Rachel E. Dubrofsky
The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette

The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette

by Rachel E. Dubrofsky

Hardcover

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Overview

Rachel E. Dubrofsky examines the reality TV series The Bachelor and The Bachelorette in one of the first book-length feminist analysis of the reality TV genre. The research found in The Surveillance of Women on Reality TV: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette meets the growing need for scholarship on the reality genre. This book asks us to be attentive to how the surveillance context of the program impacts gendered and racialized bodies. Dubrofsky takes up issues that cut across the U.S. cultural landscape: the use of surveillance in the creation of entertainment products, the proliferation of public confession and its configuration as a therapeutic tool, the ways in which women's displays of emotion are shown on television, the changing face of popular feminist discourse (notions of choice and empowerment), and the recentering of whiteness in popular media.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739164983
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/17/2011
Series: Critical Studies in Television
Pages: 164
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Rachel E. Dubrofsky is assistant professor in the Department of Communication at University of South Florida.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: The "Bachelor Industry" 1

Chapter 1 Authenticity, Whiteness

Confession, and Surveillance 17

Chapter 2 Whiteness in the Harem 29

Chapter 3 Emotional Failure 53

Chapter 4 Excessive Emotion: Her Money Shot 65

Chapter 5 "Therapeutics of the Self" 91

Chapter 6 Empowerment and Choice in the Postfeminist Nirvana 109

Conclusion: The "Ideal" Woman? 127

Bibliography 135

Index 145

About the Author 150

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