Most academic work exploring the makeover genre has argued that TV “experts” draw on a narrative of humiliation to push the participant to adopt more appropriate forms of feminine appearance. However, shows like of the makeover, are qualitatively different in tone and style from more aggressive shows. We extend emerging analyses which argue that makeover shows can be read as reflecting struggles for recognition by demonstrating that TV “experts” can also interrupt processes of mis-recognition by offering alternative symbolic systems of interpretation of the body by which the body can be recognised, visible and valued. We argue that humiliation is not the only point of affective engagement for audiences of these shows, while wanting to avoid...
Body shame is a highly interpersonal emotion, involving beliefs and fears about how one is perceived...
Selfhood and subjectivity are categories of identity that are both individual and social, i.e., defi...
In Study 1, an online survey of 495 undergraduate women, we demonstrated that watching sexualizing r...
Most academic work exploring the makeover genre has argued that TV “experts” draw on a narrative of ...
The aim of this article is to highlight the attention given by recent makeover shows, and specifical...
In the context of a purported shift from humiliation to the benign exemplified by the marked contras...
In the context of a purported shift from humiliation to the benign exemplified by the marked contras...
This paper investigates the feelings of individuals who have been exposed to the continuous demands ...
With the explosion of reality television onto screens and schedules worldwide, this timely and origi...
The unceasing popularity of makeover shows inspires us to ask questions about their place in present...
Even the most casual perusal of television over the past ten years should reveal an increasing numbe...
This article critically engages with the gender and class politics of contemporary makeover shows. T...
Reality television has spawned a proliferation of programmes that feature ‘ordinary’ people. Often t...
In 2019, fat positivity is transcending feminist discourse and establishing itself in American cultu...
The formats of makeover and lifestyle television are an evolution of the reality television genre. T...
Body shame is a highly interpersonal emotion, involving beliefs and fears about how one is perceived...
Selfhood and subjectivity are categories of identity that are both individual and social, i.e., defi...
In Study 1, an online survey of 495 undergraduate women, we demonstrated that watching sexualizing r...
Most academic work exploring the makeover genre has argued that TV “experts” draw on a narrative of ...
The aim of this article is to highlight the attention given by recent makeover shows, and specifical...
In the context of a purported shift from humiliation to the benign exemplified by the marked contras...
In the context of a purported shift from humiliation to the benign exemplified by the marked contras...
This paper investigates the feelings of individuals who have been exposed to the continuous demands ...
With the explosion of reality television onto screens and schedules worldwide, this timely and origi...
The unceasing popularity of makeover shows inspires us to ask questions about their place in present...
Even the most casual perusal of television over the past ten years should reveal an increasing numbe...
This article critically engages with the gender and class politics of contemporary makeover shows. T...
Reality television has spawned a proliferation of programmes that feature ‘ordinary’ people. Often t...
In 2019, fat positivity is transcending feminist discourse and establishing itself in American cultu...
The formats of makeover and lifestyle television are an evolution of the reality television genre. T...
Body shame is a highly interpersonal emotion, involving beliefs and fears about how one is perceived...
Selfhood and subjectivity are categories of identity that are both individual and social, i.e., defi...
In Study 1, an online survey of 495 undergraduate women, we demonstrated that watching sexualizing r...