Space Oddities: Women and Outer Space in Popular Film and Culture, 1960-2000

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Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2010 M11 4 - 256 pages

Space Oddities examines the representation of women in outer space films from 1960 to 2000, with an emphasis on films in which women are either denied or given the role of astronaut. Marie Lathers traces an evolution in this representation from women as aliens and/or "assistant" astronauts, to women as astronaut wives, to women as astronauts themselves. Many popular films from the era are considered, as are earlier films (from Aelita Queen of Mars to Devil Girl From Mars) and historical records, literary fiction, and television shows (especially I Dream of Jeannie). Early 1960s attempts by women pilots to enter the Space Race are considered as is the media drama surrounding the death of Christa McAuliffe.


In addition to its insightful film scholarship, this is an important addition to current reassessments of the Space Race. By applying insights from contemporary gender, race, and species theories to popular imaginings of women in space, the status of the Space Race as a cultural construct that reproduces and/or warps terrestrial gender structures is revealed.

 

Contents

Space for Women A Problem Deferred
1
Its About Time A Brief History of Women in Space
18
Bottled Up Inner and Outer Space in I Dream of Jeannie
49
Staying Home Astronaut Wives and Domestic Engineering
77
Chimpanzees in Space and Gorillas in the Mist
115
The Astronauts New Clothes Naked in Space in Nude on the Moon Barbarella and Alien
145
Making Contact
182
Black Holes and the Body of the Astrophysicist
205
Notes
213
Works Cited
222
Index
233
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About the author (2010)

Marie Lathers is Treuhaft Professor of French and Humanities at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. She has published books and articles in the areas of feminist theory and popular culture, 19th-century French studies, and the relationship among women, art, and literature.

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