Possession, attraction, and the thrill of the chase: Gendered myth‐making in film and television comedy of the sexes
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Studies in Mass Communication
- Vol. 12 (1) , 23-39
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15295039509366917
Abstract
This study examines articulations of “egalitarian”; courtship in romantic comedy films of the 1930s and 1940s and recent television series resurrecting their conventions. It gauges the extent to which such texts are open to a negotiated reading that re‐contextualizes heterosexual monogamy in anarchic rather than patriarchal terms. The television versions constrain this negotiated reading due to the dissemination of culturally masculine assumptions treated as professional lore and regarded as postulates by television authors and journalists who write about these creators and their creations.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Masculinity and Machismo in Hollywood's War FilmsPublished by SAGE Publications ,1992
- Redesigning Men: Hegemonic Masculinity in TransitionPublished by SAGE Publications ,1992
- Hegemonic masculinity on the mound: Media representations of Nolan Ryan and American sports cultureCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1991
- Images of power and the feminist fallacyCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1990
- Dramedy:Moonlightingas an emergent generic hybridCommunication Studies, 1989
- The Mystique of Moonlighting: “When You Care Enough to Watch the Very Best”Journal of Popular Film and Television, 1988
- Oppositional decoding as an act of resistanceCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1988
- Television and popular culture: Reflections on British and Australian critical practiceCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1986
- Screwball ComedyJournal of Popular Film and Television, 1986
- Romantic Comedy Today: Semi-Tough or Impossible?Film Quarterly, 1978