Sunday, 20 July 2014

Research - Week Commencing 14th July

Below is the two tables that show my plans for research, how successful the week what and what articles I actually found.

Week Commencing
Task
Resources
Achieved/Articles found
30th June 2014
Internet research for articles
Google Scholar -"Gender Roles In Friends Chandler Bing"
Four detailed articles.
7th July 2014
Internet research for articles
Google Scholar – continuing on the “Gender Roles in Friends Chandler Bing” search
Five detailed articles.
14th July 2014
Internet research
Planning/seeing if 



London trip would be useful
Google Scholar - continuing on the "Gender Roles in Friends Chandler Bing" search

Google – Searching Libraries in London and using their search tools to find out if they have anything that would be useful to me
3 detailed articles




Did not manage to find any good leads on this yet. I will continue this task into the next week.










Article Title
Original Source
Pros/limitations
Key Quotes
The Internet World of Fan Finction – A thesis about the origin and continuation of fan written stories based on different media forms, eg Friends.

Melissa J. Herzing, Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Thesis submitted as part of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts at Virginia Commonwealth University.
-       A few mentions of Friends in relation to gender and how the audience sees this representation and uses it.
-       Not all about Friends and gender
 “It touches on many areas that have been the focus of conventional studies, such as gender issues, group formation and maintenance, computer-mediated communication, and identity.”

Mary M. Dalton, Laura R. Linder.
-       Many mentions of Friends, not many related to gender roles.
Page 225, “Today’s young women model their hair - not their character – on Rachel Green. If they notice her workplace (in fashion, of course) at all, they see it as the site of seduction of her younger, handsome, male assistant.”


Cinderella Dreams: The Allure of the Lavish Wedding – the portrayal of weddings in film and TV.
Cece Otnes, Elizabeth Hafkin Pleck.
-       One mention of Friends in relation to the seventh series’ wedding (Chandler and Monica) and the massive audience of 30 million that it brought to watch. I could relate this to how the this reinforces female gender roles and beliefs of having a big wedding.
Page 2, “More recently, 30 million viewers watched Chandler and Monica tie the knot at the end of the seventh season of  Friends in 2001.”

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