ONTD

5:05 pm - 12/07/2012

Feminist Writer Camille Paglia spilled the tea on your favorite pop acts!


A leading feminist writer has accused Taylor Swift and Katy Perry of killing feminism and throwing society back to the 'demure girly-girl days of the white-bread 1950s'.

Camille Paglia says that both singers have 'insipid, bleached-out personas' that hark back to the man-pleasing, pre-feminist era.

In an article for The Hollywood Reporter, she wrote that as a result, many of today's young women fail to realize the role their sexuality plays in society and 'partying till you drop has gotten as harmless as a Rotary Club meeting'.



Describing 22-year-old Swift - who earned $57 million this year - she said: 'Swift affects a “golly, gee whiz” persona of cultivated blandness and self-deprecation, which is completely at odds with her shrewd glam dress sense.

'Beyond that, Swift has a monotonous vocal style, pitched in a characterless keening soprano and tarted up with snarky spin that is evidently taken for hip by vast multitudes of impressionable young women worldwide.'

She explains that many of Swift's songs touch on bland adolescent themes, about boyfriends and 'faceless louts who blur in her mind as well as ours'.

She adds: 'Swift’s meandering, snippy songs make 16-year-old Lesley Gore’s 1963 hit It’s My Party (And I’ll Cry if I Want to) seem like a towering masterpiece of social commentary, psychological drama and shapely concision.

'Indeed, without her mannequin posturing at industry events, it’s doubtful that Swift could have attained her high profile.'

Moving on to Perry, Paglia, 65, rather cuttingly describes her as a 'manic cyborg cheerleader'.

She says that despite Perry being 28 years old, she is still 'stuck in wide-eyed teen-queen mode' especially after her 14-month marriage to Russell Brand.

She explains that both Swift and Perry's personas are completely at odds with their glamorous and overtly sexy guises.

'Katy Perry’s schizophrenia - good-girl mask over trash and flash - is a symptom of what has gone wrong,' she writes.

In her essay she adds that she has noticed how many young women wear revealing clothing, however most seem 'seem curiously unaware of the erotic charge of their racy regalia'.

Paglia previously slammed Lady Gaga, insisting her over-the-top sexuality is actually 'stripped of genuine eroticism'.

She cites the star's willingness to dress in crazy outfits as an example of 'every public appearance... has been lavishly scripted in advance'.

Paglia's main complaint is that Gaga isn't sexy enough, questioning whether her opinion of sex is simply 'decor and surface'.

And now she says 'emotional deficiencies in sanitized middle-class life' are moving into other areas of the entertainment industry, leading to the success of the five Twilight films as well as this year’s The Hunger Games.

However she does applaud the 'authentic sizzling eroticism' displayed by a handful of high-earning female celebrities.

She notes that Rihanna, who earned $53 million last year, has an 'elemental erotic intensity', while Beyonce draws on the 'emotional depths of black gospel as well as the brazen street sass of hip-hop'.

She also cites Fifties U.S. singer Connie Francis, who was between 19 and 21 when she made her mammoth hits like Lipstick on Your Collar and Stupid Cupid as a role model.

And she claims that screen sirens such as Leslie Caro, Elizabeth Taylor, Kim Novak and Natalie Wood had far more complexity and sophistication than the actresses of today.

She adds: 'Middle-class white girls will never escape the cookie-cutter tyranny of their airless ghettos until the entertainment industry looks into its soul and starts giving them powerful models of mature womanliness.'



source
anus 7th-Dec-2012 10:14 pm (UTC)
I don't exactly look to pop singers to be my feminist role models. Seriously calm down.
the_pinkdress 7th-Dec-2012 10:17 pm (UTC)
okay but we can look at female representation in the media and analyze what's going on and what the possible implications are.
bellwetherr 7th-Dec-2012 10:18 pm (UTC)
you might not but millions of little girls do.
anus 7th-Dec-2012 10:21 pm (UTC)
I think their parents need to have a little talk with them then.
bellwetherr 7th-Dec-2012 10:21 pm (UTC)
oh come on. it's not uncommon for teenagers and tweens to look up to pop idols - whether their parents allow it or not. i'm not saying it's a good thing but it happens.
hey_kayla_jay 7th-Dec-2012 10:23 pm (UTC)
I dunno, my parents tried to get my sister and I to not like the Spice Girls but it certainly didn't work.
Not that the girls we're discussing here are comparable to The Spice Girls.
finchroxxx 7th-Dec-2012 10:23 pm (UTC)
That would require actual parenting tho...
hera_bearrra 7th-Dec-2012 10:28 pm (UTC)
Parents can only do so much. They're not around their kids 24/7, especially if it's a single parent household or both parents are working. Unless they homeschool their kids and make them live in total isolation (away from TV, music, other media), kids will be influenced by things they see/hear/read about and what their friends in school are reading, etc.
alexander2808 7th-Dec-2012 10:33 pm (UTC)
LOL are you for real?
harborafternoon 7th-Dec-2012 10:33 pm (UTC)
all the individuals in the world are role models tho. i mean, people learn how to be people from others. idg why people don't see how famous people would be just as easily used as a way to image oneself after or against.
calinewarkwc69 7th-Dec-2012 10:43 pm (UTC)
I agree. I mean, I think most girls go through a fangirl phase, I know I had mine. My parents were basically like "it's cool you have your own music and stuff now, but you don't have to look up to these people, they're just people. Be your own person."
tundrabeast 7th-Dec-2012 11:00 pm (UTC)
You don't understand tween girl psychology, do you honey?
solsty 7th-Dec-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
I agree.
ohkimosabe 8th-Dec-2012 12:34 am (UTC)
i agree with this.
where_i_begin 8th-Dec-2012 03:15 pm (UTC)
But these are today's pop culture icons, they can't help but be influenced by these women and the images/values they project. I had Courtney Love when I was a teen and she definitely had an impact on my views of womanhood and femininity (in a good way, I feel).
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