Girl Talk: Adolescent Magazines and Their Readers

Front Cover
University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 1999 - Social Science - 362 pages

Current feminist debate finds itself at an impasse concerning the significance of magazines for adolescent girls- are they full of oppressive prescriptions of femininity, or celebrations of female-centred pleasure and resistance against the patriarchy? The question has been examined largely by middle-aged academics, in some cases far removed in age and education from the intended consumers of these magazines, and the assumptions they have reached about the messages absorbed by young women may be completely wrong.

Dawn Currie takes a new approach, by looking at the readers themselves and how they interpret the message of the magazines in their everyday lives. Based on interviews with 48 girls aged 13 to 17, this book challenges many assumptions that have arisen through researchers making their own interpretations, such as the supposed appeal of glossy photo spreads and advertisements. In Currie's study, we find that girls prefer written texts, particularly advice columns, because they view them as useful for everyday living, particularly within the school culture, which Currie finds reinforces the message of the 'teenzines' by encouraging girls to doubt themselves rather than to question the cultural constructs that surround them. Using intertextuality as a reading strategy for materialist feminism, Dawn Currie distinguishes between the 'social' and the 'cultural' and allows us to better understand how power as a quality of social relationships works through the cultural media of fashion and beauty magazines.

From inside the book

Contents

Exploring Our Point of Entry
22
The Ideology of Womens Magazines
55
Doing Girl Talk
91
Reading as Everyday
116
The Social Life of Texts
146
The Power of the Text
169
The Everyday Experience of Subjectivity
208
Calling Cultural Constructions into Question
247
Reading
284
Description of Participants
313
Advertisements Used in Girl Talk
323
REFERENCES
337
AUTHOR INDEX
355
Copyright

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About the author (1999)

DAWN CURRIE is Chair of the Women's Studies Programme and Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia.

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