"‘Anybody May Look Smart!’: The Smart Aesthetic and Women Film Stars in 1930s Hollywood

dc.contributor.authorDuncan P
dc.date.accessioned2023-04-04T01:29:05Z
dc.date.available2023
dc.date.available2023-04-04T01:29:05Z
dc.date.issued3/04/2023
dc.description(c) The Author
dc.description.abstractAs Maria DiBattista has shown (2003, 332), the ascendance of figures like Rosalind Russell and Katharine Hepburn during Hollywood’s depression decade (1930–1939) marked the rise of a new breed of woman film star: the “smart girl.” These stars were smart in two senses. Yes, they were quick-witted and quick-tongued—proto-feminist fodder for the newly egalitarian vision of (re-)marriage peddled in 1930s screwball comedy. Yet they were also smart in a new, aesthetic sense, embodying a “smart aesthetic” that marked a shift away from the formal, affective, informational and gendered logics of glamour. For contemporary commentators on 1930s Hollywood, these stars’ smart mouths and their equally smart dresses were in clear accord—and, in part as a result of this apparent accord, the smart aesthetic earned a reputation as a progressive aesthetic formation that both expressed and reinforced the feminist potential of the new strain of “smart girls” on screen. This essay, however, complicates this view by at once elaborating and unpicking the links between these two registers of smartness. Through an analysis of the smart aesthetic as it emerged across coverage in 1930s fan periodicals, it contends that the smart aesthetic’s progressive promise may have been more apparent than actual.
dc.description.confidentialFALSE
dc.identifier.citationFeminist Media Studies, 2023
dc.identifier.elements-id458733
dc.identifier.harvestedMassey_Dark
dc.identifier.issn1468-0777
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10179/18152
dc.publisherTaylor and Francis Group
dc.relation.isPartOfFeminist Media Studies
dc.subject.anzsrc1699 Other Studies in Human Society
dc.subject.anzsrc2001 Communication and Media Studies
dc.title"‘Anybody May Look Smart!’: The Smart Aesthetic and Women Film Stars in 1930s Hollywood
dc.typeJournal article
pubs.notesNot known
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University/College of Humanities and Social Sciences
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University/College of Humanities and Social Sciences/School of Humanities, Media & Creative Communication

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