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Television Antiheroines

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This book focuses on the emergence of female characters in typically male roles, particularly in the crime and prison drama genres. Contributors explore the role of race and sexuality, focusing on ...
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  • 15 March 2017
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With a foreword by Diane Negra and Jorie Lagerway

As television has finally started to create more leading roles for women, the female antiheroine has emerged as a compelling and dynamic character type. Television Antiheroines looks closely at this recent development, exploring the emergence of women characters in roles typically reserved for men, particularly in the male-dominated genre of the crime and prison drama.

The essays collected in Television Antiheroines are divided into four sections or types of characters: mafia women, drug dealers and aberrant mothers, women in prison, and villainesses. Looking specifically at shows such as Gomorrah, Mafiosa, The Wire, The Sopranos, Sons of Anarchy, Orange is the New Black, and Antimafia Squad, the contributors explore the role of race and sexuality and focus on how many of the characters transgress traditional ideas about femininity and female identity, such as motherhood. They examine the ways in which bad women are portrayed and how these characters undermine gender expectations and reveal the current challenges by women to social and economic norms. Television Antiheroines will be essential reading for anyone with a serious interest in crime and prison drama and the rising prominence of women in nontraditional roles.

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Price: £36.95
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 15 March 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 7.00 in
ISBN: 9781783207602
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory, Television screenplays, scripts and performances, TRUE CRIME / Organized Crime, Media studies: TV and society, Gender studies: women and girls, Organized crime

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'This vital collection profitably meditates on the intersections of crime studies, feminist and postfeminist studies and television studies, and shines a light on the expanding representational possibilities for women that are taking place in global television production. [...] I suspect that Television Antiheroines will enjoy widespread adoption as a text in a number of university courses for differing constituencies of students. The essays all feature clear and accessible prose and, further, the breadth and array of the texts, and detailed bibliography for each essay, will make the collection interesting for media studies scholars (feminist or otherwise) working on a spectrum of contexts.'

Part I: Mafia Women
Buonanno, Villez, Akass and McCabe
 
Chapter 1: Godmothers in Italian Mafia Story: Or 'Something Else Besides a Mother'
Milly Buonanno
 
Chapter 2: Mafiosa, Monstruous Beauty: Power and Loneliness of a Female Mob Leader 
Barbara Villez
 
Chapter 3: Adieu Carmela Soprano! Lessons from the HBO Mobster Wife on TV Female Agency and Neo-Liberal (Narrative) Power 
Kim Akass and Janet McCabe
 
Part II: Drug Dealers and Aberrant Mothers 
Hermes, Giomi, Lotz and Rivero
 
Paying the Price: Penoza – Combining Motherhood anf a Career (in Crime) 
Joke Hermes
 
'Really Good At It': The Viral Charge of Nancy Botwin in Weeds (and Popular Culture's Anticorps)
Elisa Giomi
 
Really Bad Mothers: Manipulative Matriarchs in Sons of Anarchy and Justified 
Amanda D. Lotz
La reina del sur: Teresa Mendoza, a New Telenovela Protagonist
Yeidy M. Rivero
 
Part III: Women in Prison
Ball, Turnball and Walters
 
Chapter 8: Blurred Lines: The Queer World of Bad Girls
Vicky Ball
 
Chapter 9: Top Dogs and Other Freaks: Wentworth and the Re-imaging of Prisoner Cell Block H
Sue Turnball
 
Chapter 10: Lesbian Request Approved: Sex, Power and Desire in Orange is the New Black 
Suzanna Danuta Walters
 
Part IV: Villainesses and Anti-antiheroines
Joyce, La Pastina, Williams, Press and Redhead
 
Chapter 11: Women and Criminality in Brazilian Telenovelas: Salve Jorge and Human Trafficking 
Samantha Joyce and Antonio Las Pastina
 
'Your Turn, Girl': The (Im)Possibility of African American Antiheroines in The Wire
Bruce A. Williams and Andrea L. Press
 
Taming Pussytown: How Post-feminism Domesticated Underbelly: Razor
Leigh Redhead