2019
DOI: 10.1177/1527476419855688
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“Plow Him Like a Queen!”: Jewish Female Masculinity, Queer Glamor, and Racial Commentary inBroad City

Abstract: Starring raunchy Jewish women, Comedy Central’s Broad City (2014–2019) invites feminist comedy theory to better address race and ethnicity. Feminist comedy theory has long used Kathleen Rowe’s model of the unruly woman, which neglects racial/ethnic dimensions of unruliness. When discussing Jewish comedian Roseanne Barr, for instance, Rowe does not mention transgressive stereotypes about Jewish femininity like the “beautiful Jewess,” a historical stock figure depicting Jewish women as racially exotic and mascul… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…One of the short stories that tells about magical realism is a work from Intan Pramaditha entitled "Dark Spinner "which tells about a unique and unusual phenomenon, by raising the story of a woman's life. The Dark Spinner is a story about a disobedient and rebellious woman [55], [56]. Women have their own dark side and have their own way of holding back or showing it [57], [58].…”
Section: Magical Realism In the Text Of The Storymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the short stories that tells about magical realism is a work from Intan Pramaditha entitled "Dark Spinner "which tells about a unique and unusual phenomenon, by raising the story of a woman's life. The Dark Spinner is a story about a disobedient and rebellious woman [55], [56]. Women have their own dark side and have their own way of holding back or showing it [57], [58].…”
Section: Magical Realism In the Text Of The Storymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Abbi and Ilana not only simply behave impulsively and rebelliously, but Broad City 's protagonists also follow the steps of other confident female comedians who subvert gender roles with their behavior, as characterized by Kathleen Rowe in her book The Unruly Woman . Jonathan Branfman, who focuses on Broad City 's characters’ ethnicity, also refers to the concept of “unruly women” and references the connection Rowe makes to the grotesque of the female body. Branfman concludes: “in Western narratives, unruly women are comedic figures who laugh ‘too’ loudly, eat ‘too much’, have ‘too much’ sex, belch and pass gas, boss men around, or turn their bodies ‘inside‐out’ through menstruation and childbirth” (4).…”
Section: Broad City and Pleasurable Failuresmentioning
confidence: 99%