From Career Girl to Sexy Stewardess: Popular Culture and Women’s Work in the Canadian and American Airline Industries
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Sangster, Joan (Author)
- Smith, Julia (Author)
Title
From Career Girl to Sexy Stewardess: Popular Culture and Women’s Work in the Canadian and American Airline Industries
Abstract
This article examines three popular renditions of female flight attendants in Canadaand the United States in teen fiction, film, and advertising, with attention to representational shifts fromthe1940s to the1970s.Our analysis demonstrates that the more sexualized image of the 1960s was a significant departure from the more complicated immediate postwar presentationof the flight attendant as a resourceful and capable career girl, albeit one still constrained by dominant notions of white, middle-class femininity. Created by management decisions in the face of increased capitalist competition, in concert with the influence of popular culture and gender ideology, the sexy stewardess altered the workplace environment for female flight attendants,but the legacyof earlier popular culture may well have aided their resistance to sexualization.
Publication
Women: A Cultural Review
Volume
30
Issue
2
Pages
141-161
Date
2019
Journal Abbr
Women: A Cultural Review
Language
en
ISSN
0957-4042, 1470-1367
Short Title
From Career Girl to Sexy Stewardess
Accessed
2/28/24, 9:54 PM
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Sangster, J., & Smith, J. (2019). From Career Girl to Sexy Stewardess: Popular Culture and Women’s Work in the Canadian and American Airline Industries. Women: A Cultural Review, 30(2), 141–161. https://doi.org/10.1080/09574042.2019.1600310
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