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“We All Have Feelings for Our Girlfriends:” Progressive (?) Representations of Lesbian Lives on the The L Word
The Showtime series The L Word (2004–2009) marked one of the first dramatized representations of prominent lesbian characters. While many popular culture scholars are focusing attention on the recent “gaying” of television narrative (e.g., Battles and Hilton-Morrow in Critical Studies in Media Commu...
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Published in: | Sexuality & culture 2010-09, Vol.14 (3), p.234-250 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The Showtime series
The L Word
(2004–2009) marked one of the first dramatized representations of prominent lesbian characters. While many popular culture scholars are focusing attention on the recent “gaying” of television narrative (e.g., Battles and Hilton-Morrow in Critical Studies in Media Communication 19: 87–105,
2002
; Shugart in Text and Performance Quarterly 23: 30–54,
2003
; Critical Studies in Media Communication 20: 67–91,
2003
), far less attention is given to non-romantic interpersonal relationships surrounding main characters in these narratives. Sexuality scholarship notes that lesbian individuals must negotiate their self-disclosure to heterosexuals (Dindia in Dialectical approaches to studying personal relationships, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc., Mahwah, NJ,
1998
), and that this can be challenging for forming relationships and maintaining identity (Meyer in Communication Quarterly 51: 262–276,
2004
). Ultimately, this essay argues that despite the gains in visibility and even in intimacy,
The L Word
articulates an ideology of avoidance whereby the underlying problems of heterosexism and homophobia are left unchallenged. |
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ISSN: | 1095-5143 1936-4822 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12119-010-9073-y |