其他的“流浪女士”:审视大众文化中对弱势和无家可归妇女的刻板印象

Q2 Social Sciences
Susan Ursula Anne Smith, J. Coghlan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了保护其成员获得社会资源、服务和福利的权利,澳大利亚公民不断重新谈判和重新定义社会文化和政治参数,围绕谁属于他们社会中值得享有权利的成员。流行文化有可能形成支撑这些考虑的社会、文化和政治态度。电影和电视等流行文化媒介是一种视觉和叙事手段,它假设了好/坏、男人/女人、公民/非公民等二元性。特别是,好/坏的二元性行为是一种话语,观众通过这种话语了解哪些行为和行为被认为是社会和文化可接受的,哪些行为和行动不可接受。这篇文章试图拓宽对流行文化的理解,影响一个社会如何围绕谁是霸权群体的成员和谁是“他者”来构建其社会约束。它研究了电影中对贫穷、脆弱和无家可归的女性角色的描述,这些角色将她们塑造成可怕的“他者”,并认为这些描述在社会政治话语的空间内对澳大利亚贫穷、脆弱、无家可归的真实女性的知名度产生了负面影响。有人认为,这一群体的持续影响是,负责保护他们的政府和政策制定者不太了解他们的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Othering the ‘bag-lady’: Examining stereotypes of vulnerable and homeless women in popular culture
To protect their membership rights to social resources, services and benefits, Australian citizens constantly renegotiate and reconceptualize sociocultural and political parameters around who belongs as a rights-worthy member of their society. Popular culture has the potential to shape the social, cultural and political attitudes that underpin these considerations. Popular culture mediums such as film and television are visual and narrative devices that posit binaries such as good/bad, men/women, citizen/non-citizen and so on. In particular, the binary of good/bad acts as a discourse through which audiences develop an understanding of what actions and behaviours are considered socially and culturally acceptable, and what actions and behaviours are not. This article seeks to broaden understandings of popular culture’s potential to influence how a society construes its social strictures around who is a member of the hegemonic group and who is the ‘other’. It examines depictions of poor, vulnerable and homeless women characters in film that frame them as the monstrous ‘other’ and argues that these representations negatively impact the visibility of real women who are poor, vulnerable and homeless in Australia, within spaces of sociopolitical discourse. The ongoing repercussions of which, it is contended, are that the needs of this cohort are less visible to the governments and policymakers who are tasked with protecting them.
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来源期刊
Australasian Journal of Popular Culture
Australasian Journal of Popular Culture Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.70
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