Book Review – Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America

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Playboy and the Making of the Good Life in Modern America. Elizabeth Fraterrigo. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2009. 320 pp.

Hugh Hefner’s Playboy, founded in 1953, has been subjected to extensive analysis and criticism from the likes of feminist scholar Andrea Dworkin, the new journalism of Gay Talese, and Hefner biographer Steven Watts. So, is there anything more to be said about this magazine? Fortunately for Elizabeth Fraterrigo, the answer is yes.

Fraterrigo, an assistant professor of history at Loyola University in Chicago, uses old issues of Playboy, newspaper articles, Hefner’s scrapbooks, letters, and an interview with Hefner himself to illuminate a transitional time in America when women were entering the workforce, demanding equal pay, and taking on roles once occupied solely by males. She argues convincingly that Playboy promoted a model of masculinity that emphasized bachelorhood, apartment-living, and pro-miscuity in opposition to the traditional 1950s ideal of marriage, two children, and a suburban house. At the same time, Fraterrigo argues that Hefner’s philosophy of uninhibited sexuality was also in line with mainstream society because the goal of “prolonged bachelorhood,” in Hefner’s opinion, was to “ultimately strengthen marital bonds.”

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Book Review – Girl Zines: Making Media, Doing Feminism

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Girl Zines: Making Media, Doing Feminism. Alison Piepmeier. New York, NY: New York University Press, 2009. 272 pp.

Although the study of feminist zine culture that blossomed in the 1990s might strike the casual reader as a snapshot of an underground phenomenon in a brief historical moment, Alison Piepmeier makes the point in Girl Zines: Making Media, Doing Feminism that so-called grrrl zines are, in fact, a bedrock of third-wave feminism. In this well-researched book about the preferred media of the riot grrrl culture, she makes a compelling case for us to view the publications produced by young women in this time period as an important marker in the long history of the feminist movement.

Piepmeier, an assistant professor and director of Women’s and Gender Studies at the College of Charleston, constructs a history of grrrl zines and weaves a theoretical understanding of them through a multi-method, interdisciplinary approach that borrows from “participatory media to print culture studies to art theory” and uses oral history, critical content analysis of both zines and comments of the women who produced them. [Read more...]

Book Review – Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown

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Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown. Jennifer Scanlon. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. 288 pp.

Several years ago, a bright Women’s Studies minor in my journalism history course asked if she could do her paper on Helen Gurley Brown and why some young feminists read (often secretly) Cosmopolitan magazine. I was perplexed. Like many women who came of age in the aftermath of “second-wave” feminism, I had dismissed both Cosmo and Brown, its longtime editor and author of the 1962 shocker, Sex and the Single Girl, as the antithesis of feminism.

I wish I’d had Jennifer Scanlon’s Bad Girls Go Everywhere to recommend to this student. This very readable biography made me realize that Brown is a far more audacious thinker than I had thought, and that the intersection of women’s self-empowerment, sexuality, and class in mid-twentieth century America begs for closer examination. [Read more...]