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Reviews for There She Is, Miss America

 There She Is magazine reviews

The average rating for There She Is, Miss America based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-08-30 00:00:00
2004was given a rating of 3 stars Randy G Oreilly
I want to read this book because I love to compete in pageants.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-02-24 00:00:00
2004was given a rating of 4 stars Randy Everett
Highlights: chapter 1, 4, 5, 8 "The Miss America Pageant was not an example of the general decline of Victorian morality in the 1920s but an attempt to assert a repackaged form of restrictive Victorian gender roles." (chapter 1, Kimberly A. Hamlin) "Lois Delander, Miss Illinois [1927], was a sixteen-year-old honor student. She had previously won a medal for knowing Bible verses and boasted 'her lips had never touched coffee or tea'."(chapter 1, Kimberly A. Hamlin) "In the 1920s, crowning a passive, traditional, 'un-painted', and 'unbobbed' girl soothed a nation struggling to accept the changing gender roles brought about by suffrage, world war, and the flapper and provided a cookie-cutter version of America's ideal woman."(chapter 1, Kimberly A. Hamlin) "In other words, beauty pageants are not about beauty. They are about power." "She asserts an answer to the question 'what is feminism?' that she says is 'rooted in neither fear nor fantasy... 'Feminism is a movement to end sexism, sexist exploitation and oppression'"(bell hooks) '[..] particularly when many white people view "racism as the prejudiced behaviors of individuals rather than as an institutionalized system of advantage benefiting white."' "We are all fed a gourmet diet of Cinderella sagas and Miss America pageants, in which passivity is richly rewarded and beauty transformation buy security and love" (Rita Freedman, Beauty Bound, 1986) "Children also learn that power and happiness do not come to women through active pursuit and assertive engagement with life, but rather through obedience, servitude, patience, and ultimately, through the magic of cosmetic make-over." (Rita Freedman, Beauty Bound, 1986) "Once again, with the Miss America contest we have America's vehement preoccupation with innocence, with its inability to deal with the darkness of youth, the darkness of its own uselessly expressed ambition, the dark complexity of its own simplistic morality of sunshine and success, the darkness, righteous rage, and bitter depth of its own daughters."(Gerald Early, 'Watching the Miss America Pageant', 2000) More stuff: - Beverly Daniel Tatum - Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other Conversations About Race (1977 book) - bell hooks - Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism (1981 book) - Rita Freedman - Beauty Bound (1986 book)


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