ABSTRACT

The Talking Cure examines four nationally syndicated television talk shows--Donahue, The Oprah Winfrey Show, Geraldo and Sally Jessy Raphael--which are primarily devoted to feminine culture and issues. Serving as one of the few public forums where working-class women and those with different sexual orientations have a voice, these talk shows represent American TV at its most radical. Shattuc examines the tension between talk's feminist politics and the television industry, who, in their need to appeal to women, trades on sensation, stereotypes and fears in order to engender product consumption. However, this genre is not a one-way form of social interaction. The female audience complies and resists in a complex give-and-take, and it is this relationship which The Talking Cure aims to understand and reveal.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The Terms of the Debate about Talk Shows

chapter |33 pages

Sobbing Sisters

The Evolution of Talk Shows

chapter |37 pages

Talk is Cheap

How the Industrial Production Process Constructs Femininity

chapter |25 pages

The “Oprahfication” of America?

Identity Politics and Public Sphere Debate

chapter |26 pages

Freud vs. Women

The Popularization of Therapy on Daytime Talk Shows

chapter |33 pages

“Go Ricki”

Politics, Perversion, and Pleasure in the 1990s

chapter |28 pages

Conclusion

The Inconclusive Audience