The Movie of the Week: Private Stories, Public Events.

PositionBrief Article

Here's a sophisticated, against-the-grain study of the politics of popular TV by Elayne Rapping, who writes a regular column on culture for The Progressive. The essays in this work focus on a particular genre: the made-for-TV movie, which is usually dismissed as schmaltzy, low-brow, vacuous, apolitical fare by contemptuous critics. But Rapping takes on this prevailing elitist attitude; she defends many of these movies for being public events that wrestle with urgent social issues, and she argues that they often carry progressive, even subversive, messages, albeit in a contradictory way. Rapping's feminist perspective is especially illuminating, and her two chapters on women in these movies carry the day. Rapping notes that TV movies are not only geared toward women, they portray women in a...

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