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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

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“Get him to talk about himself”: Miss America, 50s Sitcom Daughters, and the Feminine Ideal

Area: 
Presenter: 
Sarah Trembanis (University of Delaware)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

In 1954, the longstanding Miss America pageant became a nationally televised event. American families were able to witness the final portion of the competition, generally incorporating the talent performances and interviews with the finalists. As it made its way onto the small screen, the pageant and its prescribed notion of 1950s femininity fed upon and reinforced similar unrealistic beauty and comportment ideals that were showcased and reified through 1950s sitcoms.

In this paper, I will compare the performance of femininity by the Miss America contestants in the pageants broadcast from 1954-1959 with the weekly depiction of young women on television shows like Father Knows Best, Bachelor Father, and The Donna Reed Show. These television broadcasts were consumed widely and presented a rigid definition of proper behavior for young women between the ages of 13 and 22. How did these broadcasts amplify problematic messages for young female viewers in the 1950s? What, if any, critiques did the contestants or sitcoms raise regarding “traditional” gender roles?

Session: 
TV Stereotypes
Scheduled on: 
Thursday, November 7, 11:00 am to 12:15 pm

About the presenter

Sarah Trembanis

Sarah earned a bachelor’s in History from Duke & a master’s and PhD from William and Mary. Her book,The SetUp Men: Race, Culture, and Resistance in Black Baseball, was published in July 2014. Sarah spent the 2014-2015 year on sabbatical at the University of Ferrara, Italy, working on what she hopes will be book two (tentatively titled: Effortlessly Perfect: Teenage girls in 1950s Sitcoms), drinking all the cappuccino, and trying to improve her Italian.

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