From Fairy Tales to Fabulous Lives. (Under the Direction of Anna Victoria Wilson)
Abstract ATKINS, KRISTIN GAYLE. Investigating Female Identity Formation: From Fairy Tales to Fabulous Lives. (under the direction of Anna Victoria Wilson) Identity is not a universally fixed term (Butler, 1990, p. 7); rather, it is complex construction produced and reproduced along the axes of gender, race, class, sexuality, education, and cultural context (Gauntlett, 2002, p. 13). As such, identity hinges on a combination of acts, (Sedgwick, 1990), hierarchical social categories (Butler, 1999), culture (Kellner, 1995, 2003), history, difference, representation, social institutions, and stories that define and shape the self through recursive and self-reflexive processes. This research investigates the impact of media culture, body image, relationships, and fairy tales on the identity formation of four young women. Specifically, I concentrate on key cultural models provided through electronic media, visual media culture, and schooling to follow the ways in which these women construct and co-construct their identities over the course of several interviews. Using discourse analysis as the primary tool of inquiry, this study investigates specific details in speech to identify key patterns in language, to interrogate the socioculturally-situated identities produced, and to illuminate relevant cultural models and context in an effort to better understand the ways in which girling and the institution of school inform female identity formation. Dedication This work is the product of generations of strong women who subtlety and strategically remind me that their “force is with me” when both life and work overwhelm. Thus, it is with Anna Pearl Pryor, Virginia Bea Dalton, Suzanne Atkins, Anna Kinzie and Valerie (a.k.a. “Dodie”) Hatfield that I commend this work to your review.
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