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Original Articles

Global queens, national celebrities: tales of feminine triumph in post‐liberalization India

Pages 346-370 | Published online: 17 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

This paper's analysis of print media texts about India's six Miss World and Miss Universe title‐holders maps the cultural production of the global beauty queen as an emerging hero whose tale of ascent circulates in a nation that is renegotiating its marginal position in the global economy. News and magazine texts celebrate global beauty queens' bodily discipline and devotion to fitness and grooming programs as evidence of the meritorious hard work of committed professionals. Popular biographies construct beauty queens as humble and ordinary women, who have struggled to overcome adversities in their pursuit of global fame. Media accounts navigate the boundaries between modernity and tradition when they represent beauty queens as hybrid—wholesome, patriotic, and cosmopolitan—young women, who preserve their authentic national identities despite their success in the global arena. Unpacking the mythical tales of class, gender, and national ascent that are smuggled into the public profiling of the global beauty queen, I argue that such representations of feminine agency in popular print culture authorize the ideological interests of India's consuming classes.

Notes

Radhika Parameswaran is an Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism at Indiana University, Bloomington. Correspondence to: School of Journalism, Ernie Pyle Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405‐6201, U.S. Tel: 812 855 8569; Email: [email protected]. A previous version of this paper won a First Place Faculty Paper Award (Cultural Studies Division) at the 2003 convention of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Kansas City, Kansas. Sections of this paper were presented at the 2002 South Asia convention in Madison, Wisconsin and the 2003 Global Fusion conference in Austin, Texas. The author thanks Suchitra Mohan and Chelsea Wald for their outstanding research assistance. The author is grateful to Carol Polsgrove, William Solomon, Meenakshi Gigi Durham, Bonnie Dow, Celeste Condit, and anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments in revising the paper.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Radhika Parameswaran Footnote

Radhika Parameswaran is an Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism at Indiana University, Bloomington. Correspondence to: School of Journalism, Ernie Pyle Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405‐6201, U.S. Tel: 812 855 8569; Email: [email protected]. A previous version of this paper won a First Place Faculty Paper Award (Cultural Studies Division) at the 2003 convention of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Kansas City, Kansas. Sections of this paper were presented at the 2002 South Asia convention in Madison, Wisconsin and the 2003 Global Fusion conference in Austin, Texas. The author thanks Suchitra Mohan and Chelsea Wald for their outstanding research assistance. The author is grateful to Carol Polsgrove, William Solomon, Meenakshi Gigi Durham, Bonnie Dow, Celeste Condit, and anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments in revising the paper.

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