Generation Chick: Reading Bridget Jones's Diary, Jessica, 30., and Dies ist kein Liebeslied as Postfeminist Novels
This article examines Helen Fieldings, Marlene Streeruwitzs, and Karen Duves novels in the context of the literarisches Fräuleinwunder, the generic conventions of chick lit, and postfeminism, relating all three to the globalization of the book publishing industry and its effects on German-languag...
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description | This article examines Helen Fieldings, Marlene Streeruwitzs, and Karen Duves novels in the context of the literarisches Fräuleinwunder, the generic conventions of chick lit, and postfeminism, relating all three to the globalization of the book publishing industry and its effects on German-language fiction. I argue that Duves and Streeruwitzs texts can be understood as responses to the Anglo-American chick lit that flooded the German-language book market in the 1990s, of which Fieldings novel is one of the best-known. Close readings situate both German-language novels firmly within the generic conventions of chick lit, and then look at the ways the texts relate to postfeminism, as well as second- and third-wave feminism. I conclude by arguing that our concept of Frauenliteratur should be expanded to include chick lit as well as more overtly political feminist texts. |
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title | Generation Chick: Reading Bridget Jones's Diary, Jessica, 30., and Dies ist kein Liebeslied as Postfeminist Novels |
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