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dc.contributor.authorLipsos, Eleni
dc.date.accessioned2014-05-21T10:40:14Z
dc.date.issued2013-11-19
dc.description.abstractPin-up images have played an important role in American culture, in both their illustrated and photographic configurations. The pin-up is viewed as a significant representational cultural artifact of idealistic and aspirational femininity and of consumerism and material wealth, especially reflective of the mid-twentieth century period in America spanning the 1930s to the 1960s. These images not only reflect great shifts in social mores and women’s social status, but also affected changes in both areas in turn. Furthermore, pin-up images internationally circulated in magazines, advertising and promotional material, contributed to the manner in which America was idealized in Europe and beyond. Crucially, they influenced how an eroticized and glamorous, yet unrealistic, example of femininity came to be generalized as a desirous model of femininity. In recent years there has been vital, though limited, scholarly research into the cultural and social impact of pin-up imagery, to which this thesis adds to. This thesis takes a genealogical approach, charting the development of popular female-centric “pin-up” imagery in America since the 1860s and up to the 1960s, and its resurgence since the 1980s onwards. In doing so this thesis aims to provide a social, political and cultural context to the emergence of a specific archetypal sexualized femininity, with the aim of challenging the tendency to dismiss sexualized imagery as “anti-feminist” or as trivial. Toward that end, I examine the complexity of intentions behind the production of “pin-up” images. In taking this revisionist approach I am better able to conclusively analyze the reasons for the resurgence and reappropriation of pin-up imagery in late-twentieth- and early-twenty-first-century popular culture, and consider what the gendered cultural implications may be.en_GB
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/14896
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherUniversity of Exeteren_GB
dc.rights.embargoreasonResearch to be published
dc.subjectpin-upen_GB
dc.subjectgenealogyen_GB
dc.subjectBettie Pageen_GB
dc.subjectMarilyn Monroeen_GB
dc.subjectDita Von Teeseen_GB
dc.subjectretroen_GB
dc.subjectglamouren_GB
dc.subjectaestheticsen_GB
dc.subjectfetishen_GB
dc.subjectsexualizationen_GB
dc.subjecteroticismen_GB
dc.subjecteugenicsen_GB
dc.subjectstreamline designen_GB
dc.subjecttransgressionen_GB
dc.subjectverisimilitudeen_GB
dc.subjectKitagawa Utamaroen_GB
dc.subjectGeorge Pettyen_GB
dc.subjectAlberto Vargasen_GB
dc.subjectGil Elvgrenen_GB
dc.subjectMichel Foucaulten_GB
dc.subjectmodernismen_GB
dc.subjectpopuluxeen_GB
dc.subjectfetishizationen_GB
dc.subjectOlivia De Berardinisen_GB
dc.subjectconsumerismen_GB
dc.subjectexaggerated femininityen_GB
dc.subjectdegenerationen_GB
dc.subjectfemme fataleen_GB
dc.subjectpasticheen_GB
dc.subjectrepressive hypothesisen_GB
dc.subjectRosie the Riveteren_GB
dc.subjectRaphael Kirchneren_GB
dc.subjectCharles Dana Gibsonen_GB
dc.subjectBelle Epoqueen_GB
dc.subjectLa Vie Parisienneen_GB
dc.subjectLouis Meiselen_GB
dc.subjectDespina Kakoudakien_GB
dc.titleAnatomy of a Pin-Up: A Genealogy of Sexualized Femininity Since the Industrial Ageen_GB
dc.typeThesis or dissertationen_GB
dc.date.available2014-05-21T10:40:14Z
dc.contributor.advisorCorinna, Wagner
dc.contributor.advisorLisa, Downing
dc.publisher.departmentEnglishen_GB
dc.type.degreetitlePhD in Englishen_GB
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen_GB
dc.type.qualificationnamePhDen_GB


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