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The beautiful blonde, blue-eyed virgin: An analysis of adjectives to describe women in pulp romance fiction
by Faye L. Kilday, journalism student and Carol S. Lomicky, Ph.D., associate professor Department of Communication University of Nebraska at Kearney Mitchell Center Kearney, NE 68849 e-mail: [log in to unmask]
Submitted to AEJMC, Commission on the Status of Women San Antonio, Texas August 2005 The beautiful blonde, blue-eyed virgin: An analysis of adjectives to describe women in pulp romance fiction Abstract This paper summarizes a study that examined the depiction of women characters in current romance fiction. This content analysis of adjectives used to describe the women in the text of the novels found that women were significantly described in terms of their physical appearance while intellectual attributes were significantly underrepresented. Of the 302 adjectives examined, 50% described women in terms of their physical appearance. Women in romance fiction
Background Since the founding of the Romance Writers of America in 1981, writers of romance pulp fiction have identified themselves as feminists, who value self-assertion and are aware of themselves as successful working women in a difficult profession. The question then becomes: to what extent is feminist ideology reflected in the novel itself especially in terms of how the writers of romance fiction portray the women in their stories? This study seeks to examine how women are portrayed in current popular romance through an analysis of adjectives used to describe the women in the text of select novels. The popularity of romance novels is not new. Historians trace the origins of romance fiction back to the first modern novel in English, Samuel Richardson's Pamela, published in 1740 (Douglas, 1977). Pamela also happens to be the first seduction story in which young girls are instructed to resist the wiles of men, where marriage is reward, and death and disgrace is retribution—a moral lesson that persists in current romance fiction. By the middle of the nineteenth century so-called woman's fiction experienced a heyday when sentimental domestic novels written largely by women for women dominated the literary market in America (Douglas, 1977). Since the 1960s, Western women writers have flourished in the romance fiction market with unprecedented output and worldwide market domination (Mulhern, 1989).[1] As Mulhern notes, "The title of the first romance series and the name of its publisher, Harlequin, (have) become something like a generic term . . ." (p. 50). Today romance accounts for well over one-third of all popular fiction sales in America and more than 54% of total mass-market paperback sales (Ramsdell, 2003) Romance sales bring in more than $1.5 billion a year. ("True love returns," 2001). No longer limited to paperbacks, romance novels regularly appear on the New York Times bestseller lists (Beam, 1997). The romance plot line—historically and today—is formulaic. As Moffitt (1993) describes the stories: ...are about virtually two characters, the heroine and hero. The young heroine is alone in the world and without the strength of family or friends, but she possesses an inner strength and spunk and a perfect beauty of which she alone is ignorant. The hero is rugged and handsome, and throughout the course of the story and their developing relationship . . . changes from an uncaring, even verbally or physically abusive character initially, to a nurturing, caring and affectionate lover by the story's end, punctuated in their final reconciliation and declarations of love (p. 54). Despite the formula, since the late 1980s romance has diversified to appeal to a changing readership (Frenier, 1988). For example, romance readers today can choose from categories such as: "time-travel, African American romances, romances featuring the handicapped, erotic, mystery and suspense romances, comic romances, and even Christian romances focusing on God-fearing couples for whom the height of excitement is a shy goodnight kiss" (Bemrose & Atherley, 1999, p. 58). The diversification continues. In the ongoing quest to broaden its audience and attract new readers, romance publishers' categories are going through a period of addition, multiplication and diversification (Danford, Dyer, Holt, & Rosen, 2003). For example, in 2001 publishers Jove and Kensington introduced new lines of romance that promised to be "the best in erotic romantic fiction" (Ramsdell, 2001). That same year Harlequin added a modern twist with its release of a new line called Red Dress Ink ("Romancing new readers," 2001). Unlike the traditional romance that ends in wedding bells, the Red Dress series "present(s) a more realistic picture of single life and dating, one that ends not necessarily in marriage but self-discovery" ("Romancing new readers," 2001, p. 33). As one editor of the series commented, "They're edgy; they've got attitude and a certain hipness to them" (Marsh, 2002, p. 39.) In the fall of 2004, Kensington also began publishing its Dafina line of African American romance ("Return to romance," 2004). Two authors have created the ultimate romance—one that features the reader. For $50, the name of the purchaser or anyone else's name will be incorporated into customized romance novels. Versions are "mild" or "wild" to fit the reader's preference which is determined by a customer questionnaire used to discover a partner's eye color, pet names, and other personal information. Since their inception, about 6,000 copies of the personalized novels are sold each year ("Between the Covers," 2002). Romance novel leading ladies have had a facelift as well. "Gone are the prim, modest and decidedly passive young women of earlier decades: the nurses and manicure girls hoping to catch some wealthy Mr. Right. Now, romance protagonists are more likely to be business executives or sky divers, and they know how to demand respect and erotic stimulation in equal measure" (Bemrose & Atherley, 1999, p. 58). Add to that, publishers are introducing romances with larger-bodied heroines, some of the women already are grandmothers, many have aged a decade or two—even three— and a divorcee with a child may enter the plot line ("Romance novels feature full-figured women," 2001; "True love returns," 2002). In 2003 Ballantine published "The Hot Flash Club," which is considered the first women's fiction novel that features protagonists in their 50s and 60s (Danford et al., 1993). In 2004 Berkley Books and Pocketbooks released several erotic romance thrillers. This new genre of "romantica" is a combination of romantic and erotic fiction that traces its beginnings to a number of so-called e-publishers that produce fiction for the Web (Heaton, 2004). Some traditions, however, endure: there's the relationship, the conflict to make the love work, the monogamous relationship (once love has been established between the hero and heroine), and the happy ending ("True love returns," 2002). Who are the women reading romance novels today? The stereotype is that romance readers are under-classed, uneducated homemakers (Toth, 1993). The reality is that 59% of romance readers work outside the home; many have completed some college (Sachs, 2002). More than half (57%) of romance readers are married while 23% are single (Sachs, 2002). "Many began romance reading when they entered the workforce and began battling for their rights as women" (Toth, 1993, p. 11). Other reasons women give for romance reading include: "empowerment of women, the molding of positive healthy outcomes to difficult social problems, the ability to engage the emotions, the affirmation of moral values, an optimistic outlook, the validation of the family—and pure, simple enjoyment" (Ramsdell, 2003, p. 64). Some readers explain that the stress of working outside the home while trying to keep up with home and family responsibilities has enhanced the popularity of romance reading. "Many find [a romance] a helpful antidote to the increasing stress in their lives, particularly as they have entered the labor force..." (Frenier, 1988, p. 10)." Still intellectuals criticize romance fiction as being low-brow—indeed, anti-feminist. For instance, since its beginnings in 1981 Romance Writers of America[2] has been concerned that romance novels are denigrated as "women's literature" by academic critics, the literary establishment and a vaguely defined public (Christian, 1980; Toth, 1993). Or, as one author noted, the criticism may also stem from the fact that romance is written and read overwhelmingly by women (Regis, 2003). Certainly romance fiction has not received the critical attention given to other genres of popular fiction ( Regis, 2003). Given this, the stigma of reading romance has attracted some recent attention. According to one romance reader, "Yes, I read them. I've read them for 20 years. But if you use my name in the paper, I'll kill you. People think you're stupid if you read romance novels" (Potts, 2001). Such comments cause romance readers to develop "face-saving strategies" in social situations (Brackett, 2000). One successful romance writer acknowledged that it is difficult for women to read romance novels in public because they're afraid of what people will think (Krentz, 1992): Few people realize how much courage it takes for a woman to open a romance novel on an airplane. She knows what everyone around her will think about both her and her choice of reading material. When it comes to romance novels, society has always felt free to sit in judgment not only on the literature but on the reader herself. The verdict is always the same. Society does not approve of the reading of romance novels. It labels the books as trash and the readers as unintelligent, uneducated, unsophisticated or neurotic (p. 1). Thus concealment is a romance reader's first-line of defense against criticism. If a romance reader is found out, she often will attempt to boost the intellectual credibility of the genre (Brackett, 2000). Other romance readers will try to separate themselves from other romance readers by making it appear that they aren't the normal romance reader; for example, by having an above average education level (Brackett, 2000). Like their readers, as a group, romance writers defy categorization. Romance fiction authors represent a cross-section of educated women including geologists, lawyers, historians, librarians (Toth, 1993). In her study of Harlequin, Jensen (1984) concluded that the experience of women becoming writers in a male-dominated publishing world has created a group of women writers who identify themselves as feminists. Moreover, these authors work together to keep alive the tradition of literature that is written by women for women, and, with great pride, refer to themselves as a sisterhood that battles for women's voices and values (Toth, 1993). Rabine (1985), who also examined Harlequin, concluded that the publisher has responded to the specific needs of the modern woman in the novels by focusing on the "juncture between their sexual, emotional needs on the one hand and their needs concerning work relations on the other . . ." (p. 39). The notion of romance writers as feminists also is argued by Krentz (1992). In her book of essays by romance writers, the authors unabashedly declare themselves feminists dedicated to creating feisty, independent women characters. According to one author, a woman's ultimate fantasy is not be beautiful—but to have her looks not matter at all (Krentz, 1992). Literature Review In the scholarly literature much of the research about romance fiction is grounded in audience reception theory, which shifts emphasis from meaning encoded in the text and authors to the role of the reader in decoding the text .[3] For example, one researcher concludes: that the romance reader "actively attributes sense to lexical signs in a silent process carried on in the context of her ordinary life" (Radway, 1984, p. 8). Moreover, Radway finds that ". . . romance reading seems to permit American women to adopt some of the changing attitudes about gender roles by affirming that those attitudes are compatible with the social institution of marriage . . ." (p. 73). Moffitt's study of adolescent and adult mothers and daughters, who read romances, found her sample of readers to experience the ideological framework of the romance novel, which suggests to them that they should match certain socially-dictated ideals (1993). Most importantly, in terms of the study at hand, Moffitt (1993) argues that while readers receive positive meanings from romance novels, meanings also can be subversive. She cites as example: "Reading a text that suggests women should match socially-dictated physical ideals" (Moffitt, 1993, p. 52). In a more recent study of female teens and romance reading, DeBlase (2003) found that "girls pay close attention to what they read in and out of the classroom as they engage in a meaning-making process designed to help them understand their gendered selves in relation to others" (p. 633). A review of the literature also reveals a number of studies using discourse analysis. For example, Jones' intertextual reading of Ladder of Years, typically cast as anti-feminist, and The Awakening, a landmark feminist text, concludes that the former constitutes a "post feminist" revision of the latter—"one that posits a feminist trajectory for women that does not necessitate a complete flight from the domestic sphere" (Jones, 2003, p. 272). Darbyshire's study focuses on the transformation of the romance industry in the late 1990s during which he finds a proliferation of Christian-theme romances. Moreover, he notes, "The anti-feminist bias of these books . . . actually reflects a popular trend in the general North American populace, one that fits into the political fantasies, if not the romantic fantasies, of a significant number of North American women" (p. 80). Furthermore, underlying the submission to patriarchal authority in the Christian-theme romances is a renewed submission to the ultimate figure of male authority: God (Darbyshire, 2003, p. 83). Meyer also used discourse analysis (2003) to examine three Victorian romance novels. In this study, the researcher found that consumption was used in the texts to link the disease to the misfortunes of love. The researcher concludes that such portrayals of the Victorian heroine and the mythology of the consumptive most certainly would have been recognized by the audience of the time. Similarly, more contemporary readers also would recognize the captivity and romantic discourses in pulp captivity romance, according to another researcher. Indeed, this author argues that pulp captivity romance promotes the reproduction and proliferation of the conventional social order (McCafferty, 1994). Such story lines establish official ideals including "universal, enthusiastic heterosexism; the need for women to be extra ordinary in their beauty, bravery, wisdom, etc., if they are to be loved; and the construction of an exotic people who unhesitatingly welcome a magnificent white hero" (McCafferty, 1994, pp. 52-53). On a slightly more positive note, Frenier (1988) concludes that British portrayals of heroes and heroines are more stereotypic than their American counterparts. The romance fiction literature also is comprised of various studies relative to the burgeoning romance novel industry outside of the United States. For example, Azar (2003) focuses on the changing images of women in public and private spheres in contemporary Iranian literature; Slavnikova (2003) explores the fate of the romance plot in Russian literature; Puri (1997) examines the role of romance novels in the lives of young, single, middle-class women readers in urban India; Harney (1994) examines the role of money in medieval Hispanic chivalric romance; Mulhern analyzes the literary characteristics of the then relatively new genre of romance fiction in Japan in 1989. In summary, although Radway's research finds that romance readers negotiate meaning and understanding of the books, the literature also suggests that romance fiction reinforces attitudes about gender roles (Darbyshire, 2003; McCafferty, 1994). Or, as Moffitt (1993) found, women may be compelled to match socially-dictated physical ideals found in the text of the novels. For younger girls, romance fiction provides even stronger messages about gender for, as DeBlase (2003) argues, girls reading romance novels are involved in a meaning-making process designed to help them understand their gendered selves in relation to others. Discourse analysis also reveals that the plot lines of romance frequently reinforce stereotypic ideals of womanhood. Others have observed the scarcity of scholarly research in women's romantic fiction (Brackett, 2000; Regis, 2003). This research seeks to begin to fill that void by empirically documenting the way in which romance writers depict women in their novels by examining the adjectives within the text of select novels. It is important to analyze current popular romance fiction especially when self-proclaimed feminist romance authors and their publishers profess that current romance reflects the changing role of women while moving away from stereotypic depictions of female characters. This study set out to answer two questions: (1) Which types of adjectives do writers of current romance fiction use with more or less frequency to describe the women in their novels? (2) When adjectives are used to describe women in current romance fiction, are the descriptors positive or negative? Method For this content analysis, the focus was on adjectives that described women in the first chapters of 10 current romance novels. The USA Today "Top 150 Best-Selling Book List" and the New York Times "Best Selling Paperback List" were used to determine the top 10 best-selling paperback romances for the week of Sept. 29, 2002. The 10 best-selling paperback romances for that week included: Going Home by Nora Roberts, Full House by Janet Evanovich, Summer Pleasures by Nora Roberts, Once Upon a Kiss by Nora Roberts, Kentucky Heat by Fern Michaels, My Favorite Bride by Christina Dodd, Mercy by Julie Garwood, A Woman Betrayed by Barbara Delinsky, 204 Rosewood Lane by Debbie Macomber, and Uneasy Alliance by Jayne Ann Krentz. The text was examined to identify adjectives used to describe women in the first chapters in the novels. Adjectives were coded to determine the total number of adjectives. The adjectives were then categorized into the following designations: Cognitive. Adjectives that referred to a woman's intellectual ability and skill. Examples include intellectual, analytical, and inept. Personality. Adjectives that showed a woman's personality or nature. For instance, outspoken, defiant, confident, and helpless were coded as personality adjectives. Affective. Adjectives that portrayed women in terms of their reaction to a situation or described the woman's emotional state. Some adjectives used to describe women in an emotional context are: frightened, anxious, hysterical. Appearance. Adjectives that described a woman relative to her appearance. Examples of appearance adjectives are beautiful, soft, and fat. Sexual. Adjectives that depicted women in a sexual context. Such adjectives include passionate, tantalizing, and erotic. After coding each adjective in terms of the above categories, the researchers examined the adjectives qualitatively to determine if they were positive, negative, or neutral. This was determined by examining the context within the sentence from which each adjective was taken. An explanation of the sub categorization for each type of adjective follows: Cognitive Adjectives. Was the woman's intellectual ability characterized as average, above average or below average? An example of an above average intellectual ability would be clever. If the adjective characterized the woman as average or above average in intelligence, it was considered positive; if the characterization of the woman's intellect was below average, it was considered negative. Personality Adjectives. Was the woman depicted as dependent or independent? Dependent adjectives were ones that referred to a woman's personality that caused the reader to believe she was unable to take care of herself (example-helpless). Independent adjectives were the opposite; they implied that a woman was self-reliant (example-aggressive). Adjectives depicting independence were coded as positive; adjectives reflecting dependence were coded negative. Affective Adjectives. Was the woman portrayed as weak or strong? Adjectives that implied a woman was vulnerable were considered weak (example-hysterical) and, therefore, negative; positive emotion adjectives reflected strength or a positive emotional state (example-happy). Appearance Adjectives. Was the woman described in terms of her appearance in a positive or negative way? Adjectives that portrayed women's appearance as attractive or above average were positive (example-stunning) and adjectives that showed women's appearance to be unattractive were negative (example-fat). Descriptive adjectives without a positive or negative connotation about a woman's appearance were coded as neutral (example-tall). Sexual Adjectives. How were women described in sexual terms? Adjectives including sexy and passionate would be considered sexual adjectives. The coders were unable to determine a positive or negative connotation to sexual adjectives; thus, all were categorized as neutral. Adjectives not fitting into any of the main categories were coded as indeterminate. Adjectives without a positive or negative connotation were coded as neutral. A pilot study of six different romance novels also was conducted. These romance novels were selected randomly among a local public library paperback romance collection. The only criteria used for the novels selection for the pilot study were that they were written by different authors, and the novel had a post-1980 copyright date. The content of the first chapters of the books was examined in order to fine-tune the categories and sub-categories used in the study. A single researcher working with the coding instrument coded all the content. Recoding was conducted periodically to ensure intracoder reliability. Intracoder agreement for all categories was 98.6%. A second coder also coded a random sample of two chapters. Intercoder reliability for all categories and sub-categories was 92.3.%. Findings The research results indicate that women in the romance novels examined here were described by appearance significantly more than any other category of adjectives, and the women characters were described significantly less in terms of cognitive ability and in a sexual context. Overall, romance writers used 302 adjectives to describe women in the first chapters of the 10 best-selling paperback romances used in this content analysis. For statistical purposes, the four indeterminate adjectives were dropped from the analysis. A Chi-Square Test for Goodness of Fit was calculated, and, as Table 1 shows, the differences between the observed and expected frequencies in the five categories of adjectives are too great to be attributed to sampling fluctuation. In order to determine which categories of adjectives were the major contributors to the statistical significance, a standardized residual was computed on the five adjective categories. When a standardized residual for a category is greater than 2.0 in absolute value, one can conclude that the category is a major contributor to the significant X2 value. Specific to this study, adjectives describing women in terms of their physical appearance, cognitively, and in a sexual context were major contributors to the X2 value (see Table 2). In other words, appearance adjectives were statistically significant for their frequent use, and cognitive and sexual adjectives for their infrequent use as descriptors of women characters. A discussion of the findings in terms of each of the research questions follows: Which types of adjectives do writers of current romance fiction use with more or less frequency to describe the women in their novels? Romance writers significantly used adjectives to describe women in terms of their physical appearance. As Table 1 shows, 50% (151) described women's appearance while only 6% (18) were cognitive adjectives and 6% (18), referred to the woman's sexuality. Other descriptors of women: 20% (61) referred to personality, 18% (54) concerned emotion. Seven of the 10 novels contained cognitive adjectives to describe women in the text—although cognitive adjectives comprised only a small percentage of the total. All of the books contained appearance personality adjectives, and 9 of the novels contained emotion adjectives. Four of the books had sexual adjectives in the first chapter. When adjectives are used to describe women in current romance fiction, are the descriptors positive or negative? This analysis revealed that overall more positive adjectives were used to describe women—48% (145) compared to 36% (108) and 16% (49), negative and neutral, respectively. Of the 151 appearance adjectives 62% (93) were positive while only 18% (27) portrayed women's appearance negatively. In the appearance category 20% (31) were neutral. Robert's Once Upon a Kiss illustrates positive appearance adjectives with, "She was pale and beautiful . . ." (p. 7). However, in Mercy, ". . . but now her body was fat and grossly bloated, and her once perfect alabaster skin was blotchy and sallow " (p. 15), is an example of negative appearance adjectives. Kentucky Heat by Michaels provides several examples of neutral appearance adjectives. "Her hair had grown in curly red and was about two inches long." Although not statistically significant, the category of adjectives used most often after appearance adjectives was personality adjectives. Personality adjectives that implied a woman was dependent made up 36% (22) of the 61 personality adjectives while 64% (39) of the personality adjectives suggested female independence. An example of independent adjectives can be found in Summer Pleasures: "Lee glanced up again, her eyes calm and confident" (p. 17). Interestingly, adjectives that described women in emotional terms—54 total—made reference to strength and stability only 26% (14) of the time while nearly three-quarters, 74% (40), of the emotion adjectives implied female weakness. For example, Garwood's Mercy, uses a weak emotion adjective in "John dismissed the nearly hysterical woman without a backward glance" (p. 34). By contrast, Krentz uses a strong emotion adjective in Uneasy Alliance with "Her reaction was that of fierce determination . . ." (p. 9). Although the authors in this study appeared to have little interest in the women's intellectual attributes, when cognitive adjectives were used they were positive: 89% (16) of the 18 compared to 11% (2). For example, in Robert's Summer Pleasures, positive cognitive adjectives can be seen in "I know a woman who has one of the sharpest, most analytical minds I've ever come across" (p.21). By contrast, "She might be a little harebrained, but she wasn't dangerous, (p. 18) is an example of a negative cognitive adjective from Evonovich's Full House. The 18 adjectives that described women sexually were coded as neutral because such adjectives defied positive/negative categorization. In Robert's Going Home, the author gives examples of how sexual adjectives typically were used in the novels. "The coolly, sexy, passionately driven Vanessa Sexton . . . " (p. 10) and "She, who was known for her passion . ." (p. 19).
Table 1 Adjective typology used to describe women in current pulp romance fiction
Cognitive Personality Emotion Appearance Sexual Total Positive 16 22 14 93
145 (48%) Negative 2 39 40 27
108 (36%) Neutral
31 18 49 (16%) Total X2 (4, n = 302) = 196.09 p< 0.005 18 (6%) 61 (20%) 54 (18%) 151 (50%) 18 (6%) n = 302 Table 2 Standardized residuals for adjective typology Adjective Typology R Cognitive -5.45 Personality .077 Emotion -.82 Appearance 11.66 Sexual -5.45 Total n =302
Discussion Despite romance writers' identification with feminism, this research tells us something about what female qualities romance fiction continues to celebrate. Women in current romance pulp fiction are portrayed as beautiful damsels—if not in distress—clearly needing an emotional crutch. Although this study did not examine the work and careers of the women in the novels, a qualitative analysis revealed that publishers appear to be making good on their promise that the stories should reflect the increasing number of women in the labor force. Many of the women in the novels in this study held jobs or were involved in careers. That said, however, the adjectives the authors used when describing women in emotional terms still frequently referred to them as weak or needy. And although the personality adjectives that portrayed women as independent outnumbered the dependent adjectives, there were all too few of them. The same can be said of adjectives used to describe women's intellectual abilities. Overwhelmingly, the authors attentions were turned to the physical appearance of the women characters. Clearly, looks matter. Then again, perhaps women don't really care if the characters in romance novels resemble reality. In Radway's study, the women she talked with "readily admit in fact that the characters and events discovered in the pages of typical romance do not resemble the people and occurrences they must deal with in their daily lives" (p. 59). She also found that the women in her study "insisted repeatedly that when they are reading a romance, they feel happy and content. Several commented that they particularly relish moments when they are home alone and can relax in a hot tub or in a favorite chair with a good book" (p. 62). "It's genre fiction," according to one romance writer. "I'm not trying to write the great American novel. I'm writing to entertain. And what's wrong with that?" (Potts, 2001, D1). Apparently nothing—at least according to the nearly 40 million women who read romance novels every year despite criticisms against the genre and its readers (Sachs, 2002). As one romance reader commented, "We don't want to read about guys with beer bellies who come home from work and park themselves in front of the TV. We live with these guys" (Wagner, 1985, pp. 78-81)." That said, however, in the aggregate, romance fiction along with the content of other popular media—especially television—contribute to a culture in which femininity is defined narrowly and primarily in terms of a woman's physical attributes. For example, Glascock (2001) concluded that female characters on prime time television are younger and more provocatively dressed than male characters and that enticement continues to be more common among females. Indeed, Glascock's study reinforces Davis's (1990) conclusions of some 15 years ago in which the appearance of the television woman was premium and "reflective of traditional cultural definitions of beauty and femininity" (p. 330).[4] In 1996 Gow's study of the portrayal of gender on MTV found that for women to star in music videos they had to demonstrate physical talents rather than exhibit the musical talents typically displayed by the men in lead roles. Moreover, women in both lead and back-up roles in music video were portrayed primarily in ways that emphasized their bodies and facial features (Gow, 1996). In terms of the romance novel, additional research is needed to examine what appears to be a great disconnect: between the writers' claims of dedication to creating feisty, independent women characters unconcerned with their looks and the way in which women characters actually are depicted in the stories, as well as how the readers may—or may not—be incorporating the lessons of romance fiction into their lives.
[1] For example, Harlequin began shipping romance books into China in 1995 as part of a co-publishing arrangement with China's Foreign Languages Press and the China National Publishing Industry Trading Corporation ("Romances for China," 1995).
[2] The first national conference of the Romance Writers of America, held in Houston in June, 1981, had 800 participants, mostly women (Rabine, 1985). Today the organization boasts more than 8,000 members ("True love returns," 2002).
[3] See Radway, J.A. (1984). Interpretive communities and variable literacies: The functions of romance reading. Daedalus 113. 49-74; Radway, J. A. (1983). Women read the romance: The interaction of text and context. Feminist Studies 9, 53-78; Snitow, A. B. (1983). Mass market romance: Pornography for women is different. In A. Snitow, C. Stansell & S. Thomas (Eds.), Powers of Desire: The Politics of Sexuality (pp. 141-161). New York: Monthly Review Press; Modelski, T. (1982). Loving with a vengeance: Mass-produced fantasies for women. Hamden: Archon Books.
[4] Since the 1990s researchers examining the types of female characters on prime-time television have included studies on single women (Atkin, 1991) and working women (Atkin, Moorman, & Lin, 1991). Other studies that have examined characters in terms of gender include Davis, 1990; Greenberg & Collette, 1997; Lauzen & Dozier, 1999; and Elasmar, Hasegawa, & Brain, 1999. And while the research shows that the face of prime-time television has become more feminine and the role of women more accurately reflects reality, a premium continues to be placed on attractiveness. Women in romance fiction
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