The Glass Slipper: Women and Love Stories
English
By (author): Susan Ostrov Weisser
Why is the story of romance in books, magazines, and films still aimed at women rather than at men? Even after decades of feminism, traditional ideas and messages about romantic love still hold sway and, in our postfeminist age, are more popular than ever. Increasingly, we have become a culture of romance: stories of all kinds shape the terms of love. Women, in particular, love a love story.
The Glass Slipper is about the persistence of a familiar Anglo-American love story into the digital age. Comparing influential classics to their current counterparts, Susan Ostrov Weisser relates in highly amusing prose how these stories are shaped and defined by and for women, the main consumers of romantic texts. Following a trajectory that begins with Jane Austen and concludes with Internet dating sites, Weisser shows the many ways in which nineteenth-century views of womens nature and the Victorian idea of romance have survived the feminist critique of the 1970s and continue in new and more ambiguous forms in todays media, with profound implications for women.
More than a book about romance in fiction and media, The Glass Slipper illustrates how traditional stories about womens sexuality, femininity, and romantic love have survived as seemingly protective elements in a more modern, feminist, sexually open society, confusing the picture for women themselves. Weisser compares diverse narrativeshistorical and contemporary from high literature and low genresdiscussing novels by Jane Austen and Charlotte Brontë, Victorian womens magazines, and D. H. Lawrences Lady Chatterleys Lover; Disney movies; popular Harlequin romance novels; masochistic love in films; pornography and its relationship to romance; and reality TV and Internet ads as romantic stories.
Ultimately, Weisser shows that the narrative versions of the Glass Slipper should be taken as seriously as the Glass Ceiling as we see how these representations of romantic love are meant to inform womens beliefs and goals. In this book, Weissers goal is not to shatter the Glass Slipper, but to see through it.
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