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Pinteresting

 

wedding-board

Pinterest is a very fascinating tool for those studying post-feminist theory and provides a fabulous avenue for deconstructing some of the arguments made by Angela McRobbie.  In McRobbie’s article Post-Feminism and Popular Culture she utilizes Bridget Jones’s Diary as an example to illustrate the self-monitoring subject.  Self-monitoring refers to the tools in which in this context western women use to response to a new reflexive modernity in which they find themselves enjoying a new-found liberation from traditional gender roles, are left in a way to their own devices to create a new social structure for themselves.  Women are now responsible for creating their own individualism regarding all aspects of their romantic, professional and social selves (260-261).

Today’s young women in their twenty-somethings or early thirties struggle to make the most of this reflexive modernity, much like Bridget Jones.  They must be strong, independent and liberated and breakdown gender roles.  The expectation to get an education, find a suitable respectable career and to delay partnering as well as parenthood is expected or else she is deemed ungrateful or ignorant of the strides made by the feminist movements of the 70s and 80s that saw women’s progress in society hit its peak in the 90s.  This progress is now under fire by feminists who believe that today’s young generation of women who are compromising their efforts for gender equality, in an era of mass media infiltration.  Young women today are constantly asked to walk the line between feeling liberated and empowered while not subjecting themselves to the wants of men and the evil of media messages.  While all of these mixed messages are being navigated Pinterest rapid rise as a integral social media site throws a bone into the mix on how women are creating a space to secretly escape from the progressive lifestyles they’re “empowered” to lead to an online reality of the “good ole days”.

Pinterest provides women and young women specifically an online platform to create categorical inspiration boards, of sorts.  Its a space for individuals to ‘pin’ different images of all things that interest them.  Popular categories include food, pastries, health, fashion, quotes, and of course weddings.  These extremely stereotypically traditional feminine interests are highlighted on Pinterest, presented with a modern twist.  Instead of classic chocolate cake recipes you have hip red velvet cake brownies and healthy paleo diet breakfast ideas.  Like Bridget Jones Pinterest encourage self-monitoring and self-reflection with much content dedicated self improvement, specifically health and fitness.

On Pinterest the individual can be their ideal self.  A person who is fit and healthy, bakes intricate pastries, is dressed to the nines and is in the midst of planning their big wedding.  The amount of wedding resources Pinterest provides images to its audience is astounding.  Everything from wedding gowns, wedding hair, wedding decor, wedding flowers, wedding rings, wedding song playlists, wedding invitations, wedding photography, wedding videography and it goes on and on.  One does not even need to be engaged and can have their entire wedding planned from the colour of the napkins to the song of the first dance.  Pinterest is a secret oasis for young “progressive” women to exercise a certain suppressed dream of traditional perfection that is shockingly similar to the values of the 50s.

A young women can be sitting in a gender studies class while simultaneously pinning ideas for her bridesmaids dresses at the back of the class.

ONE-DIRECTION-AND-BEATLES

Let me set the scene.  You are on the bus with a particular individual with whom, to make it interesting, you highly admire and perhaps even harbour some romantic feelings towards.  Hypothetically speaking  you plug your headphones into your iPhone  and start to jam out, which probably explains why this person isn’t picturing exuding romantic vibes in return so thankfully for your sake this is all hypothetical.  So anyways this desirable person who now finds you hypothetically anti-social starts to look through your iTunes library.  Your reaction?

PANIC.  You think to yourself, “Ohmigod this person is gonna see that I have the entire Nickleback discography on my phone.  They’ll see that Mambo Number 5 is my most played song.  Oh gosh even your playlists are a source of embarrassment with titles such as ‘Kick-Ass Cardio Mix’ and ‘I’m All Alone’ which consists solely of songs by Adele and Bon Iver”.   Fight or flight response instantly kicks in following this internal monologue and you immediately snatch your iPhone back and insist that you haven’t updated you iTunes “since like high school”.

This phenomenon is a result of what Storey refers to in last week’s reading from Chapter 3 as “popular discrimination” (p.52),  And we’ve all experienced it one time or another.

Storey defines “popular discrimination” as the critique that while most high culture is good, “some popular culture is also good” ( p.52).  Popular Culture theorists Hall and Whannel pursue the ideal that taste can be taught to an extent and that “a training of discrimination” is not to be looked at as dividing pop culture into categories of good and bad but seeing the “difference in value” between, for example, Mozart vs. Bryan Adams.  The two artists had different limits and goals when creating their music but they both created nonetheless.

This form of discrimination is all around us, especially college-aged kids who have very few tools to increase our social status.  I believe taste in pop culture, at the moment and through-out 20-something-year-old-history, has been a vicious marker of those with elite taste and the bottom-feeders.  The Beatles are a staple of any music enthusiast’s repertoire, while boy bands to many people’s chagrin are making an impression comeback.  Only now they’ve swapped tear-away track pants for half sleeves and Harry Styles.  However one cannot ignore the simple fact that both have girls fainting at concerts, screaming at the top of their lungs and breaking into hotels to meet the band.  Just wait until our grandkids think that those 5 boys who auditioned for that reality TV show back in the early 2000s are the epitome of Classic Rock.  Is it really all relative or are some of your cursing me for even attempting to compare the two such bands in the first place?  Don’t be so prejudice.

Just remember folks you read this blog before it was cool

-kc