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Girls being Rey: ethical cultural consumption, families and popular feminism

Girls being Rey: ethical cultural consumption, families and popular feminism
Girls being Rey: ethical cultural consumption, families and popular feminism
This paper argues that consumers of popular culture engage in practices of ‘ethical cultural consumption’, whereby the consumption of cultural texts is imagined as having the potential to ‘do good’ both individually and socio-politically. The paper explores data from an online questionnaire and drawing activity with girls aged 5–10 and their parents on the experience of costume playing as Rey from the contemporary Star Wars trilogy. Imagined as a ‘girl who can do anything’, Rey represents a new kind of popular feminist hero and role model for girls, enabling a degree of critique of normative gendered role models for children. ‘Being Rey’ also represents a deterministic project through which parents aim to cultivate the ‘right’ kind of girls, seeking to instil the resilience to ‘cope’ with unknown futures. More than a purely individual project, we argue that parents invest in an individualized idea of doing ‘good’ through consumption, drawing on a notion of the consumer as a political actor with the power to affect social change. Investigating the project of participating in and consuming culture ‘ethically’ allows for an exploration of what it means to ‘be political’ and ‘do good’ as a consumer in neoliberalism.
Popular feminism, costume play, ethical consumption, families, girls, neoliberalism, participatory culture
0950-2386
546-566
Wood, Rachel
49cc75cb-27e2-4bb6-bb35-6ddea700224b
Litherland, Benjamin
950f16e5-098a-4c36-9293-bbf457fd6649
Reed, Elizabeth
06fc34da-5626-478a-9c54-327cf6e82f50
Wood, Rachel
49cc75cb-27e2-4bb6-bb35-6ddea700224b
Litherland, Benjamin
950f16e5-098a-4c36-9293-bbf457fd6649
Reed, Elizabeth
06fc34da-5626-478a-9c54-327cf6e82f50

Wood, Rachel, Litherland, Benjamin and Reed, Elizabeth (2020) Girls being Rey: ethical cultural consumption, families and popular feminism. Cultural Studies, 34 (4), 546-566. (doi:10.1080/09502386.2019.1656759).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper argues that consumers of popular culture engage in practices of ‘ethical cultural consumption’, whereby the consumption of cultural texts is imagined as having the potential to ‘do good’ both individually and socio-politically. The paper explores data from an online questionnaire and drawing activity with girls aged 5–10 and their parents on the experience of costume playing as Rey from the contemporary Star Wars trilogy. Imagined as a ‘girl who can do anything’, Rey represents a new kind of popular feminist hero and role model for girls, enabling a degree of critique of normative gendered role models for children. ‘Being Rey’ also represents a deterministic project through which parents aim to cultivate the ‘right’ kind of girls, seeking to instil the resilience to ‘cope’ with unknown futures. More than a purely individual project, we argue that parents invest in an individualized idea of doing ‘good’ through consumption, drawing on a notion of the consumer as a political actor with the power to affect social change. Investigating the project of participating in and consuming culture ‘ethically’ allows for an exploration of what it means to ‘be political’ and ‘do good’ as a consumer in neoliberalism.

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Being Rey - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 August 2019
Published date: 3 July 2020
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords: Popular feminism, costume play, ethical consumption, families, girls, neoliberalism, participatory culture

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 433887
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433887
ISSN: 0950-2386
PURE UUID: 58c24bbd-fe47-4aac-98c0-f12596a745b2
ORCID for Elizabeth Reed: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0885-2908

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Rachel Wood
Author: Benjamin Litherland
Author: Elizabeth Reed ORCID iD

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