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Sex, and Career in "Sex Term Paper

Pages:6 (1869 words)

Sources:1+

Subject:Social Issues

Topic:Sex

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#60796227


It is through these facets of every "Sex" woman character that makes the show meaningful and realistic enough to make it audiences believe that they, too, can attain the personalities and triumphs in love, sex, and career lives of Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte, and Miranda.

Indeed, love, sex, and career as depicted in "Sex" is actually embedded in the show's women characters. The close relationship of the women with each other symbolically represents the intertwined relationship of love, sex, and career, wherein each factor is representative of a woman character in "Sex." Through its characters, "Sex" has managed to cultivate and maintain the ideology of liberal thinking in matters concerning love, sex, and career -- an ideology that proves essential for women, in order to further strengthen their personalities and individualities without resorting to radical expressions of femininity, a fault that feminists often suffer from.

As Richards (2003) discusses in her research, "Sex" allows women to "move through a still gender-divided, postmodern city," promoting the image of the 'single, unattached woman' in order to truly experience and enjoy her life, an ideology that is evidently a product of postmodernist thinking (155). As discussed and analyzed in this paper, the transition that occurred in each "Sex" women character and depictions of facets of their lives marks the reconciliation in asserting women's ability to experience the ideal life of their choice and experiencing real life as it is presented to them.

Bibliography

Fairley, J. (2002). Cash in the city: Affording Manolos, martinis, and manicures on a working girl's salary. NY: John Wiley and Sons, Inc.

Kamen, P. (2000). Her Way: Young women remake the Sexual Revolution. NY: New York University Press.

Nussbaum, E. (January 4, 2004). "Carrie Bradshaw's Final Reckoning." New York Times on the web.

Orenstein, C. (September 5, 2003). "What Carrie could learn from Mary." New York Times on the web.

Richards, H. (2003). "Sex and the City: a visible flaneuse for the postmodern era?" Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, Vol. 17, No. 2.

Rothenberg, R. (2004). "Media infatuation with "Sex" clouds reality of viewership." Advertising Age, Vol. 75, Issue 9.

Salamon, J. (June 9, 2004). "Will "Sex and the City" without sex have much appeal?"…


Sample Source(s) Used

Bibliography

Fairley, J. (2002). Cash in the city: Affording Manolos, martinis, and manicures on a working girl's salary. NY: John Wiley and Sons, Inc.

Kamen, P. (2000). Her Way: Young women remake the Sexual Revolution. NY: New York University Press.

Nussbaum, E. (January 4, 2004). "Carrie Bradshaw's Final Reckoning." New York Times on the web.

Orenstein, C. (September 5, 2003). "What Carrie could learn from Mary." New York Times on the web.

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