Cover image for Girls and Philosophy.
Girls and Philosophy.
Title:
Girls and Philosophy.
Author:
Greene, Richard.
ISBN:
9780812698879
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (185 pages)
Series:
Popular Culture and Philosophy
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Thinking about Girls -- PART I: Everyone here looks how I would look with a nose job. -- 1. How Not to Watch Girls -- 2. Don't Get Mad at Girls -- 3. Adam, Like a Hero -- 4. Why Girls Can't Be Spoiled -- PART II: Am I seriously the only one of us who prides herself on being a truly authentic person? -- 5. What Gilrs Teaches Us about Millennials and the Meaning of Life -- 6. Jessa the Existentialist -- 7. Can Hannah Rewrite Her World? -- 8. Can Millenials Be Authentic? -- 9. The Q-Tipping Point of Anxiety -- PART III: If you're here to tell me what a bad person I am, I don't want to hear it. -- 10. Listen, Ladies! Or Maybe You Shouldn't -- 11. The Seven Deadly Sins of Girls -- 12. Vulnerable Young Workers -- 13. A Tale of Two Hannahs -- PART IV: I thought this would be a nice opportunity for us to have fun together and prove to everyone via Instagram that we could still have fun as a group. -- 14. Forever Unsatisfied -- 15. What Their Clothes Tell Us about Those Girls -- 16. Who Are the Ladies? -- 17. Suffering for Want of Love -- 18. Were We Educated for This? -- 19. Chinese Philosophy Looks at Girls -- References -- The Voices of Their Generations. Or at Least. . . -- Index.
Abstract:
The drama-comedy show Girls—often under-rated by being perceived as Sex and the City for the Millennial generation—has made TV history and provoked controversy for its pitilessly accurate portrayal of four oddly sympathetic twenty-something female characters, notable for their self-absorption, empathy deficits, and ineptitude with relationships. Among other breakthroughs, it is the first show to depict the sex act among the alienated young as nearly always awkward and unfulfilling. In Girls and Philosophy, a team of diverse yet always sensitive, empathic, and ept philosophers approach the world of Girls from a variety of angles and philosophical points of view. Underlying this New York world is the new reality of ambitious yet unfocused young people from comparatively advantaged backgrounds having their expectations chilled by the severe and prolonged economic recession. The writers attack many fascinating issues arising from Girls, including the meaning of authenticity in the twenty-first century, coming of age in a society with no clear guidelines for most of what matters in life,Girls as the only TV show the pop-culture-hating professor Theodor Adorno might have admired, feminist appraisals of these not-very-feminist characters and their frustrations, what the wardrobes of the four mean philosophically, how each of the four deals with the anxiety that comes from inescapable freedom, whether we need to amend the traditional list of seven deadly sins in the context of present-day New York, how the speech of the Millennials illustrates Austin's theory of speech acts, how the learning of Hannah, Shoshanna, Jessa, and Marnie compares with the ancient Greek theory of the education of the young, and of course, why we once again find it natural to think of women in their early- to mid-twenties as ‘girls'.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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