The Guardian has a really long feature on whether it’s okay for feminists to like Sex and the City. If you skip to the last paragraph, you’ll discover that smart women everywhere can enjoy the show and upcoming movie as long as they realize SATC is not a guide to life (duh). “It does make for quite uncomfortable viewing,” said Professor Imelda Whelehan of De Montfort University author of The Feminist Bestseller: From Sex and the Single Girl to Sex and the City. “How do we respect [Carrie]? And Mr. Big is such an interesting element. Even his name is masculine. He is like this phallus at the center of it all.” So true, Imelda. Yet, even though the show depicts Carrie, Charlotte, Samantha, and Miranda obsessing over what men think a little too much, the show still treats women as important, and we are, so that’s nice. [The Guardian, U.K.]
Amelia
[report]wrote on April 16 2008 @ 02:03 pm:
I loved Sex and the City cause I thought it was fun to watch and addressed some topics that women really thought about, cared about, and discussed with their friends. I definitely thought the women were too man obsessed, which is probably why I liked Miranda the most. But at the end of the day, did I look to the show to be some beacon of feminism. No. Am I still a feminist? Hell yeah.
Also, I watch The Bachelor. And The Hills. And Temptation Island (how I miss that show!)—so SATC seems like serious stuff in comparison.