Branded Women in U.S. Television: When People Become Corporations

Branded Women in U.S. Television: When People Become Corporations

by Peter Bjelskou
Branded Women in U.S. Television: When People Become Corporations

Branded Women in U.S. Television: When People Become Corporations

by Peter Bjelskou

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Overview

Branded Women in U.S. Television examines how The Real Housewives of New York City, Martha Stewart, and other female entrepreneurs create branded televised versions of the iconic U.S. housewife. Using their television presence to establish and promote their own product lines, including jewelry, cookware, clothing, and skincare, they become the primary physical representations of these brands. While their businesses are serious and seriously lucrative, especially reality television enables a certain representational flexibility that allows participants to create campy and sometimes tongue-in-cheek personas. Peter Bjelskou explores their innovative branding strategies, specifically the complex relationships between their entrepreneurial endeavors and their physical bodies, attires, tastes, and personal histories. Generally these branded women speak volumes about their contemporaneous political environments, and this book illustrates how they, and many other women in U.S. television history, are indicative of larger societal trends and structures.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498507387
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/02/2016
Series: Critical Studies in Television
Pages: 146
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Peter Bjelskou teaches American history, politics, and cultural studies at the University of Copenhagen.

Table of Contents

Part I
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: From Midcentury Housewives to Martha Stewart: Women and Products as a Staple in U.S. Television
Chapter 3: Zeitgeist and Camp at Bravo TV

Part II
Chapter 4: The Entrepreneurial Housewife: Jill Zarin and Alex McCord’s Branded Versions of the Domestic Goddess
Chapter 5: The Curious Presence of the Upper Class in Reality TV: Countess LuAnn de Lesseps and Sonja Tremont Morgan
Chapter 6: Embodying Neoliberalism: Bethenny Frankel’s Skinnygirl Empire

Conclusion
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