<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0104-026X</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Estudos Feministas]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Estud. fem.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0104-026X</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Centro de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas e Centro de Comunicação e Expressão da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0104-026X2007000100003</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[The expansion of "the feminine" within the Brazilian public sphere: telenovelas of the 1970s and 1980s]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[A expansão do "feminino" no espaço público brasileiro: novelas de televisão nas décadas de 1970 e 80]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Hamburger]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Esther Império]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Adelman]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Miriam]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidade de São Paulo  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2007</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2007</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>3</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0104-026X2007000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0104-026X2007000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0104-026X2007000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This paper revisits the wide range of critical literature that, from a variety of theoretical perspectives and with an emphasis on different historical periods and countries, deals with the relationships between mass media and representations of gender relations. This review of the literature focuses on works that are particularly suggestive for our ensuing discussion on the major conventions of Brazilian telenovela, a television genre that blends elements of documentary and fiction and treats the nation in melodramatic terms. Analysis of relevant programs that were exhibited during the 70s and the 80s suggests that these soaps constructed the Brazilian public space in terms that expanded what the industry had conventionally defined as "woman's domain".]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[O texto retoma a literatura crítica e múltipla que, a partir de diversas perspectivas teóricas, com ênfase em diferentes períodos históricos e países, trata das relações entre meios de comunicação de massa e representações das relações de gênero. Essa revisão bibliográfica seleciona trabalhos sugestivos para a discussão que se segue sobre as principais convenções das novelas brasileiras, gênero de programação que articula elementos do documentário e da ficção, tratando da nação em termos melodramáticos. Análise de títulos relevantes exibidos nos anos 70 e 80 sugere que novelas pautaram o espaço público brasileiro em termos que expandem o domínio convencionalmente definido como feminino.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[television]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[telenovelas]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[gender]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[nation]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[televisão]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[telenovelas]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[gênero]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[nação]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><a name="_ftnref1"></a><font face="verdana" size="4"><b>The expansion of "the    feminine" within the Brazilian public sphere: <i>telenovelas</i> of the 1970s    and 1980s</b><a href="#_ftn1"><sup>1</sup></a></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="3"><b>A expans&atilde;o do "feminino"    no espa&ccedil;o p&uacute;blico brasileiro: novelas de televis&atilde;o nas    d&eacute;cadas de 1970 e 80</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>Esther Império Hamburger</b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Universidade de São Paulo</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Translated by Miriam Adelman    <br>   Translation from <a href="http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-026X2007000100010&lng=en&nrm=iso" target="_blank"><b>Revista    Estudos Feministas</b>, Florianópolis, v.15, n.1, p. 153-175, Jan./Apr. 2007</a>.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p> <hr noshade size="1">     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>ABSTRACT</b> </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">This paper revisits the wide range of critical    literature that, from a variety of theoretical perspectives and with an emphasis    on different historical periods and countries, deals with the relationships    between mass media and representations of gender relations. This review of the    literature focuses on works that are particularly suggestive for our ensuing    discussion on the major conventions of Brazilian telenovela, a television genre    that blends elements of documentary and fiction and treats the nation in melodramatic    terms. Analysis of relevant programs that were exhibited during the 70s and    the 80s suggests that these soaps constructed the Brazilian public space in    terms that expanded what the industry had  conventionally defined as "woman's    domain".</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>Key words</b>: television; telenovelas; gender;    nation.</font></p> <hr noshade size="1">     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>RESUMO</b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">O texto retoma a literatura cr&iacute;tica e    m&uacute;ltipla que, a partir de diversas perspectivas te&oacute;ricas, com    &ecirc;nfase em diferentes per&iacute;odos hist&oacute;ricos e pa&iacute;ses,    trata das rela&ccedil;&otilde;es entre meios de comunica&ccedil;&atilde;o de    massa e representa&ccedil;&otilde;es das rela&ccedil;&otilde;es de g&ecirc;nero.    Essa revis&atilde;o bibliogr&aacute;fica seleciona trabalhos sugestivos para    a discuss&atilde;o que se segue sobre as principais conven&ccedil;&otilde;es    das novelas brasileiras, g&ecirc;nero de programa&ccedil;&atilde;o que articula    elementos do document&aacute;rio e da fic&ccedil;&atilde;o, tratando da na&ccedil;&atilde;o    em termos melodram&aacute;ticos. An&aacute;lise de t&iacute;tulos relevantes    exibidos nos anos 70 e 80 sugere que novelas pautaram o espa&ccedil;o p&uacute;blico    brasileiro em termos que expandem o dom&iacute;nio convencionalmente definido    como feminino. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>Palavras-chave:</b> televis&atilde;o; telenovelas;    g&ecirc;nero; na&ccedil;&atilde;o. </font></p>     <p></p> <hr noshade size="1">     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2">In contemporary times, the paradoxical dynamics    of local and transnational forces has led to the questioning and restructuring    of conventional institutions such as nations, states, forms of government, family    patterns and gender relations.  Within this process, opposite tendencies co-exist    in paradoxical ways.  A tendency toward the homogeneization and centralization    of  the global culture industry, for example, co-exists with opposing forces    that affirm difference and subjectivies, promoting fragmentation.  Gender, ethnic    and racial identities subsist in a world in which the boundaries between the    public and the private, the political and the personal, the masculine and the    feminine  are redefined, which also makes  conventional disciplinary boundaries    unsatisfactory. <a name="_ftnref2"></a><a href="#_ftn2"><sup>2</sup></a>  Scholars    in anthropology, sociology, literature, film studies, philosophy, gender studies,    among other fields engage in various kinds of inquiries that seek to establish    adequate tools to account for a panorama that is undergoing rapid transformation.    Within this context, some topics appear recurrently, specifically related to    the problematics of media representation. Among them, this paper deals with    studies that discuss constructions of  national representations, redefinitions    of the boundaries between public and private, and the articulation of these    problems with issues of race and gender. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The relations between gender and media constitute    a problematic that sustains an extensive literature in a variety of languages,    representing diverse theoretical perspectives and dealing with a wide range    of media, such as film, television fiction and printed fiction.  In Brazil,    although the articulation between media –in particularly, <i>telenovelas</i>    – and gender relations is present in early works, the topic has nonetheless    been insufficiently studied in recent times. Therefore it is useful to go through    a brief sketch of several critical works of feminist inspiration, beginning    with the first studies done by Laura Mulvey, English film director and essayist,    during the mid 1970s, and moving to more recent scholarship that from my point    of view aids our reflections on the relations between media and gender relations    in general, suggesting perspectives that are interesting for thinking about    the Brazilian case. From there I will go on to considerations on the trajectory    of Brazilian <i>telenovelas,</i> particularly during the 1970s and 80s, as a    specific case of the expansion of the presence of the feminine in public space.    Finally, I speculate on the contemporary situation s and the relationship between    <i>telenovelas<a name="_ftnref3"></a><a href="#_ftn3"><b><sup>3</sup></b></a>,</i>    as a proto-interactive genre, and reality shows.  </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="3"><b>1 Mass culture and gender. </b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">I look here at studies that can be located within    different currents of critical thought,with varying degrees of refinement and    theoretical solidity: from Andreas Huyssen's archeological study of the opposition    between notions of mass culture and modernism in the 19th century, steeped in    the German tradition, to works written at the "heat of the moment", a sort of    field notes on media phenomena, such as those dealing with the death of princess    Diana. In the case of the more recent studies on contemporary phenomena, their    essayistic tone, permeated by personal impressions, is symptomic of the times.    Authors and works mentioned here are articulated in their relationship to issues    that are brought out by the numerous studies on telenovelas in which I have    been a participant over the last ten years, focusing on reception, textual analysis    and the mapping out of processes of unequal interlocution that characterize    the fabrication of this television genre.  My choice of literature seeks to    respond to the issues that empirical research has raised.  It is not easy to    express this dynamic of coming and going between theory and practice in research    and criticism.  Nonetheless, this will be precisely the effort I will make,    beginning with my indication of which approaches I consider to be the most suggestive    and those that did not figure as an a <i>priori</i> in my work but to which    I arrived through the issues that emerged from the work itself and which, again,    suggest the centrality of the relationship between gender and media. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">I begin with Andréas Huyssen<a name="_ftnref4"></a><a href="#_ftn4"><sup>4</sup></a>,    whose mapping of the ways in which the very notion of "mass culture" emerged    as a construction with a specific gender is very suggestive. For Huyssen, the    notion of mass culture emerges as feminine in a context in which the feminine    is also associated with the private domain of the home and the supposedly emotional    and uncontrollable female temperament. Mass culture is for Huyssen the "other"    in relation to which the project of modernist art can be understood. It is worth    calling attention to the eloquence of Huyssen's interpretation, which uncovers    the substance of two universes that are usually treated as different – and even    opposing – precisely within this relationship of opposition that defines and    constitutes both simultaneously. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Huyssen's historical and conceptual work, centered    around the 19th century, shares the thesis of other authors who are dealt with    further ahead who propose the hypothesis (very suggestive, in my view) that    the public exhibition of these repertories through communications media that    go beyond the boundaries of the private domain may contribute to stimulating    the  ongoing redefinition of these notions – or more precisely, to the "expansion"    of the universe conventionally defined as feminine. On the more contemporary     plane, authors identify mass culture –television, soap operas, or in the Brazilian    case, the <i>telenovela – </i>with the feminine world that is usually restricted    to the private matters  proper to the domestic sphere.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">From different theoretical perspectives, authors    such as Laura Mulvey, Tânia Modleski, Nancy Fraser and Miriam Hansen<a name="_ftnref5"></a><a href="#_ftn5"><sup>5</sup></a>    characterize the relationship between different audio-visual media such as film    and television and gender relations as a necessary dimension for the understanding    of contemporary forms of conceiving social life, and particularly, the constitution    of subjectivity. Some of these works show that by leaving gender out, modern    definitions of the public sphere have eluded  the underlying premise that the    space of politics and work had been thought of as masculine, whereas the private    space of the home – to which television belongs – was conceived of as feminine.    Upon calling attention to the fact that gender differences are thought of as    oppositions that are  subordinate to the opposition between public and private    spaces, this literature has contributed to calling these conceptual boundaries    into question and beginning their re-definition.   </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The first feminist works on television emphasize    the way in which programs destined to a female audience reproduce and reinforce    notions of the public and the private that are associated with male and female    domains.  Laura Mulvey, English scholar and film maker and pioneer of feminist    film theory, defined television as a privatizing force:  while film encouraged    the desire to leave the home and participate in public life, television provided    incentive to stay home. For Mulvey, the expansion of television in post-war    United States is associated with women's return to the domestic space of the    home.  In this regard, women's programs of the 1950s are understood as part    of an effort to keep women confined to the private space of the home and to    domestic and family responsibilities, while men continued to circulate in public    space.  Mulvey considers that television appropriated and encapsulated the redeeming    potential of theater and of the French literary melodrama of the 19th century    .<a name="_ftnref6"></a><a href="#_ftn6"><sup>6</sup></a> In her reading of    television texts, Mulvey associated melodrama with the emergence of suburban    America and with an emphasis on daily life oriented toward the family, thus    providing a guarantee for the reproduction of dominant bourgeois values. Mulvey's    work remains a reference today, as it registers connections between audiovisual    products and gender relations and thus revolutionizes the study of representation.     </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Tania Modleski, another feminist thinker, begins    from the Gramscian legacy that seeks to detect instances of resistance in the    moment of reception of media texts (a point to which we will return to below)     and relates the American soap opera to the fragmented pace of domestic routine.     She attempts to understand the nature of women's involvement with this most    devalued of  televison genres whose audience is 90% female – associating the    repetitive and slow character of its narrative to the dispersion that is characteristic    of home routines.  Modleski identifies a correspondence between the representation    of the domestic sphere as it is inscribed in television soap operas and what    she interprets as the experience of domestic routine. Going more deeply into    the internal logic of the narrative and its reception, her work offers some    suggestive clues for understanding the nature of viewers' relationship with    the genre. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2">Recent feminist work emphasizes that, rather    than reinforcing previously-defined oppositions and boundaries, mass culture    and television melodrama in particular have played a role in diluting these    imaginary boundaries and in disseminating issues that have been defined as public,    political and masculine within the private, domestic, women's domain. <a name="_ftnref7"></a><a href="#_ftn7"><sup>7</sup></a>    With this task at hand, such studies have shown how intrinsec and endogenous    mechanisms of media production and reception can be thought of as forces for    social change. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Lynne Joyrich<a name="_ftnref8"></a><a href="#_ftn8"><sup>8</sup></a>    engages with Mulvey's approach to television melodrama. In her view, melodrama,    television and consumerism are mutually reinforcing, yet television melodrama    disseminates "feminine connotations" that "are diffused to a general audience,    opening up contradictions (...) that invite further investigation" (p.229.)    In other words, the difference between the targeted female audience, responsible    for what the author has designated as the "women's connotations" of the program,    and the wider public that accesses the repertory suggests an opportunity for    studies that map interlocutions which do not necessarily unfold according as     foreseen.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In her study of the representations that sprung    up around television at the time it was introduced in the United States of the    post-war period, Lynn Spigel – as Laura Mulvey before her – associates the diffusion    of a new means of communication to the emergence of the suburbs outlying major    urban areas. Yet for Spigel, rather than reinforcing women's confinement to    the domestic sphere, television brought information on what was happening in    the public sphere into the private and isolated suburban middle class space    and to the women who spent long days in its exclusively residential neighborhoods,    its deserted streets far from the bustle of the world.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">From a different perspective, removed from but    not alien to feminist problematics, Joshua Meyrowitz<a name="_ftnref9"></a><a href="#_ftn9"><sup>9</sup></a>    suggests that television carries out a series of dislocations of repertoires    - masculine and feminine, child and adult, public and private – in the shifting    landscape of the United States of the 1950s. Meyerowitz uses an architectural    metaphor to justify his argument.  In his view, television breaks down the walls    that separate the different rooms of a house.  In this way it is also a medium    that dislocates repertories, bringing  for example the masculine repertory of    news reporting into women's home space, facilitating women's access to matters    that were previously restricted to men and their specific space of work and    leisure.  Meyrowitz suggests that this generalized access to repertories that    had been more exclusive may explain unexpected changes in gender relations such    as the emergence of the feminist movement or women's entrance into the labor    force. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">.The author suggests the relevance of what could    be described as "thematic dislocation".  In other words, matters that were once    confined to a specific group of persons, in specific situations,  may through    television escape the established hierarchies of institutions such as the church,    school, the family and politics and now be accessed by all.  Meyerowitz calls    attention, for example, to the politization of the feminine universe that has    occured as a consequence of the domestic-sphere penetration of repertories defined    as masculine. It is also worth noting – and Joyrich's questioning moves in this    direction – that television also promotes movement in the opposite direction,    making neighborhood gossip available to all through the screen.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In this regard, Miriam Hansen's work on North    American film and the inclusion of women in the public sphere in that country    at the beginning of the 20th century is suggestive.  Based on historical research,    the author suggests that the unexpected presence of women in movie theaters    led the industry to produce films whose narratives, costumes and stars sought    to cater to women's expectations. In Brazil, the consolidation of the television    industry took hold through programming centered around the telenovela, a genre    that producers, advertisers and television viewers defined as feminine. The    consolidation of the industry coincides historically with demographic changes    such as women's entrance into the labor market, the drop in the average number    of children per family and the rise in the number of divorces and rapid urbanization.    <a name="_ftnref10"></a><a href="#_ftn10"><sup>10</sup></a> In the case of Brazilian    television, the question is:  how have <i>telenovelas</i> captured and expressed    this process? </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="3"><b>2  Television <i>telenovelas</i> in Brazil    and the redefinition of the boundaries of public space. </b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">As I mentioned earlier, pioneering studies of    telenovela reception examine the supposedly predominantly female nature of these    programs. These studies were very bold for their time in the sense that they    bring together both a reception studies approach and the gender dimension, two    cutting-edge problematics of the decade of the 1980s. Through them, in particular    as they are expressed in theses written by  Sonia Pessoa de Barros Miceli, Ondina    Fachel Leal, Jane Sarques and Rosane Manhães Prado,<a name="_ftnref11"></a><a href="#_ftn11"><sup>11</sup></a>    we have been able to move ahead in our thinking about the gender dimension not    as an <i>apriori</i>  that would  circumscribe the female audience as privileged    interlocutor of these researchers, but as a notion to be problematized. This    is what I will attempt to do below, seeking to show that <i>telenovelas</i>    capture and express this expansion of the feminine universe to the extent that    they make inroads into the space – theoretically defined as masculine – of politics    and news reporting.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">"<i>Telenovelas</i> are for women". This common    sense notion functions over the various stages of production and reception of    the genre, introduced into Brazilian television in 1951 as a fill-in that from    1970 until today – although perhaps with lesser repercussion - has come to head    the list of the most popular programs. Within the context of commercial television,    telenovelas constitute a cultural artifact that is capable of mobilizing a national    audience.  In fact, until the early  1990s, they averaged 50% of the audience,    a figure which meant that around 50 million viewers watched the main telenovela    simultaneously.  </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2">Market researchers responsible for carrying out    audience and opinion polls claim that women make up the bulk of telenovela viewers.     A variety of radio and television programs as well as magazines that specialize    in the genre also define women as their target population.  The largest of the    latter, intitled <i>Contigo</i> (literally, "With You") was developed with a    female readership in mind. Literature on telenovela reception takes it for granted    that women viewers are their privileged subjects. Data on audiences confirm    that women constitute the majority of the soap-opera watching public and recent    ethnographic work suggests that television viewers agree with this assertion.    </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Yet the widespread acceptance of this affirmation    does not mean that <i>telenovelas</i> restrict themselves to those domains of    life that the theories guiding culture industry production associate with women's    universe.  .It is precisely Brazilian <i>telenovelas</i>' vocation to overstep    the narrow boundaries of fictional television series made for women that makes    the trajectory of these series throughout the history of Brazilian television    a suggestive case for thinking about the role of media representation in the    unusual networks of contemporary sociability, especially with regard to gender    relations.  <i>Telenovela</i> popularity today is taken for granted, as if it    were to be expected that melodramatic feuilletons that had their origin in multinational    corporations' soap commercials would become part of a shared national repertory,    that is, a space ruled by certain conventions established over time and related    through forms and contents that are recognized by ample portions of the population    as an arena where national representations are enacted. To interpret the phenomenon    of the telenovela in Brazil means recognizing that,  beyond the governmental,    commercial and ideological projects that are involved, the genre has carved    out meanings and directions that were unforeseen and unplanned.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">From very early on, elements of Brazilian history    and culture have been present in <i>telenovelas</i>, constituting the genre's    "local trademark" and notwithstanding the opposing tendencies represented by    the conventions of international industry.  Standing examples are the telenovelas    written by veterans such as Ivani Ribeiro, Walter Durst and Benedito Ruy Barbosa,    who have been active in the field since the 1960s.. During the 1970s, contemporary    events -  social and political, but also those related to fashion, manners and    behavior - became preponderant elements of reference in dramas that presented    the tensions of a country that saw itself as belonging to the future and seemed    to believe that "its time had come". Well-known telenovelas confirm the effort    of authors engaged in extrapolating the limits of what they see as "dramalhão"    (or exaggerated melodrama) <a name="_ftnref12"></a><a href="#_ftn12"><sup>12</sup></a>    Without neglecting their melodramatic content, these telenovelas exaggerated    their feuilletonistic  vein, in other words, their intimate relationship with    the extra-diegetic universe, the world outside their narrative. Such constant    reference to contemporary temporality turned <i>telenovelas</i> into a privileged    showcase for what it means to be "modern", through a depoliticized and diluted    version of that concept: as being in sync with contemporary behavior and fashion</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The political and ideological content of telenovelas    was an issue that marked the cultural debate of the 1970s and became the subject    matter of numerous academic papers. Foreign works, as I have discussed elsewhere,<a name="_ftnref13"></a><a href="#_ftn13"><sup>13</sup></a>    read <i>telenovelas</i> from the perspective of "engaged professionals" and    emphasize the possibility that they have to generate critical political ideology    from inside the culture industry. Others emphasize the industrial and commercial    character of the product in order to demonstrate that the critical intentions    of engaged professionals are lacking in real concrete conditions for fulfillment.    These authors emphasize the role of television serials in the reproduction of    dominant ideologies and in the dissemination of consumerist fantasies. Recent    work speculates on the immediate influence that telenovelas have on political    behavior, such as election results. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The research that discusses the relationship    that <i>telenovelas</i>, as women's programs, have with the female public does    not privilege the discussion of the political implications of gender. And works    that deal with the political implications of<i> telenovelas</i> tend not to    consider the implications of this television genre on gender relations. Yet    as programs that during the 1970s and 1980s were geared toward middle class    women – envisioned by the industry as ladies of domesticity, interested in romanticism    and intimate plots, as opposed to men who were conceived as the privileged audience    for documentaries and newscasts-, telenovelas overstepped these definitions,    generating new parameters which in turn brought other issues to the forefront    of debate. Telenovelas signalled a redefining of the boundaries separating men's    and women's spheres, the political and the domestic, the public and the private,    text and context, theory and practice. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">During the 1970s and 1980s, telenovelas progressed    from their previous identification as productions promoted by laundry detergent    companies to  their recognition as a legitimate space for interpreting and reinterpreting    national identity, cast in terms of ideal types of family structure, (men, women,    father,mother, husband and wife)  This change is a consequence of the search    carried out for a greater immediate relevance that could increase telenovela's    commercial value, to the extent that they would become a privileged space for    advertising new products and for the pedagogical demonstration of new habits    associated with "modern" life styles.  This vocation for that which is current,    as a  showcase project, unfolded through an uncommon appropriation of elements    of journalistic language. Mixing conventions of fiction with those of newsreporting,    telenovelas continued to use references to national repertories and inadvertently    established a shared repertoire, a promiscuous virtual space whose verisimilitude    depended on the appropriation and elaboration of elements of conjuncture and    daily life – a convention that was inaugurated in the French feuilletons of    the 19th century. This shared repertoire is also fruit of the ideological agenda    of the professionals involved in the genre. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In their search for the immediate, telenovelas    combined formal conventions from the repertory of television fiction made for    women with those developed through newscasting and documentaries. This led to    a connection of the private sphere of domestic life and the public domain of    politics, forging a strange sense of national community..</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Several examples should help to provide concreteness    to this argument.  During the early 1970s,  the allusions that were made to    the country were carried out in terms that were scantly politicized. A sequence    from a sports documentary that appears at the beginning of the telenovela <i>Irmãos    Coragem </i>(1970, "The Courage Brothers") situates the drama of a brother    who leaves his native town, distant and anachronic yet familiar, to confront    the glamorous, cosmopolitan world of the big city in time and in space.  Spatially,    it refers to Brazilian national territory, through the landscapes of the state    of Minas Gerais as well as those of  the metropolis; in time, it indicates that    the  narrative is concurrent with World Soccer Cup of  1970. Coincidence in    time and space allow and reinforce the connection between the private drama    of its characters and the potentially broad community of television viewers    across the country. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Similarly, <i>Selva de Pedra </i>(1972, "Stone    Jungle") as the title suggests, defines the diegetic domain of the narrative    as the domain of the city. Documentary shots of the city in its initial vignette    - streets, sidewalks, cars, street lamps and buildings – allude to the anonymity    of public life in major cities.  Within this context, the conventional story    of a man's fall from innocence as he comes into contact with the frivolous yet    glamourous world of his rich relatives, his wife's revenge and the couple's    final reconciliation in classical melodramatic style (topped off with the news    of the wife's pregnancy), represents the dilemmas faced by  migrants who during    these years exchanged their rural habitat for an urban milieu.  <i>Selva de    Pedra </i>takes up the moral challenges of those who wish to maintain their    family and community ties and at the same time climb the big city's social ladder,    an argument that is very similar to another soap, <i>Vale Tudo, </i>aired in    1988 – the  year television censorship was ended – making open allusions to    the nation.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Both telenovelas problematize the trajectory    of characters who are natives of the metropolis, who for different reasons distanced    themselves and then later came back to climb the social ladder. <i>Vale Tudo's    </i>intent to make statements about Brazil is emphasized in its opening vinhette,    done as a montage, a style contrasting with its conventional and repetitive    narrative of love and betrayal.  Here, as in other telenovelas, aerial shots    of specific landscapes mark narrative transitions, situating the drama in easily    identifiable locales.  This formal convention serves to realize television's    vocation for extending the viewers's gaze to distant places, thus adding a touristic    motif that consolidates landscapes from far-off places and associates them to    different types of daily life conduct.  But it also reinforces the sense of    belonging to an imaginary community that becomes less abstract and more familiar    through sharing not only the act of watching images and stories exhibited nationwide    at the same time, but speculating on the characters'  motives and the possibilities    for future plot developments.  </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Roque Santeiro</i> (1985, "Roque, the Saint    Maker") is very explicitly a drama about a city that lives on lies. Its narrative    appeals to well-known melodramatic artífices, such as false identities. But    here, instead of the wife who pretends to be dead in order to escape her husband's    persecution, as in <i>Selva de Pedra, </i>we find a man who, considered to be    dead, flees from his poor and isolated hometown with enough money to establish    himself and see the world. Just like Simone, character from Janete Clair's soap,    the protagonist of this script written by Dias Gomes and Aguinaldo Silva hides    his true identity, which in turn becomes the pivotal resource behind the entire    plot. Moral motives – the desire for revenge, in the case of the  <i>Selva de    Pedra </i>character, and blame, in Roque's case – fuel the characters in both    plots. The revelation of "true identity" unfolds slowly, offering material for    daily episodes. In <i>Irmãos Coragem, </i>the issue of identity emerges in the    literal split  personality of its tormented protagonist, who appears successively    as Lara, Diana and Márcia, all played by the actress Gloria Menezes.   The character's    psychological personality split is solved in the end through surgical intervention,    where the medical technological equipment of a  surgery room takes center stage    and the revelation of the psychic trauma Lara underwent in her childhood is    made.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The oppositions that propel these narratives    unfold around a major tension between "modernity" and "tradition", organizing    a contrast between metropolitan locations and small towns of the back country,    groups of rich and poor characters, groups belonging to different generations    and men and women around moral dilemmas. The good and the bad, honest and dishonest,    sincere and untrustworthy, truthful and manipulatives are engaged in the interaction    that moves the narrative ahead.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In constructing "modern" universes that exist    in opposition to "traditional" ones, these telenovelas allude to a persistent    paradigm for representing Brazil as a "nation of the future", which in some    sense served as a references for both communists and military regime, forces    of Left and Right during the 1950s and 60s.  The movement toward the modern    is seen as necessary and almost inexorable, although it is also imbued with    mixed signals. The content of this "development" varies. These telenovelas capture    and express the ideological universe within which diverse political forces and    cultural movements have positioned themselves, delving into political themes    through a melodramatic language, dealing with "tradition" and "modernity" in    terms of consumer goods, means of transportation and communication and behavioral    patterns, sexuality, gender relations and family structure. This is how telenovelas    come to occupy portions of public space, a peculiar public space that is characteristically    saturated by a combination of intimate matters, consumerism and nationality.    </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Roque Santeiro</i> and  <i>Vale tudo</i> are    among the list of telenovelas that have had greatest public repercussion.  Although    coverage of these <i>telenovelas</i> has been confined to the cultural sections    of newspapers, this has nonetheless moved beyond the scope of sections that    specialize in television.  Both have reached segments of viewers who do not    usually watch this type of program.  <i>Roque Santeiro</i>  had a similar impact    in other Latin American countries. <i>Roque Santeiro </i>and <i>Vale Tudo</i>    may be considered at the same time as apex and turning point in the trajectory    of telenovelas, marking the beginning of a disarticulation of the conventions    that marked the genre over the preceding period. While <i>Roque Santeiro </i>emphasized    the survival of traditional Brazilian <i>coronelista </i>practices with irony    and cinicism, <i>Vale Tudo </i>called attention to the unintended consequences    of modernization within urban cenários. <i>Irmãos Coragem </i>and <i>Selva de    Pedra </i>drew attention to the perverse persistence of anachronism. Similarly    to other titles pertaining to the latter part of the decade of the 1980s, such    as <i>Roda de Fogo </i>("Wheel of Fire") and <i>O Salvador da Pátria </i>(Savior    of the Fatherland) by screenwriter Lauro César Muniz, these telenovelas became    the first public space of the New Republic to problematize corruption, a topic    that was to dominate the agenda of the first direct presidential elections of    the post-military regime republic, and that set the political agenda of the    early 1990s, culminating in President Fernando Collor de Mello's impeachment.     Unfortunately, corruption has embarassingly continued to occupy this position    as a prime issue on the order of the day.  And it is worthy to note that corruption    may very well have become endemic, bringing a narrative structure to institutional    politics that is close to that of the telenovela or perhaps even more pertinently,    a genre to which it is related, the reality show. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">With the broadcasting of <i>Irmãos Coragem</i>,     the major television network <i>Rede Globo's </i>prime time (eight o'clock)    <i>telenovela</i> moved to the top of the list of most popular television programs.    <i>Irmãos Coragem</i>  is also mentioned in the literature as a telenovela that    attracted a significant male audience. The supposedly "Western" style of the    narrative that was used in publicizing the soap was reported by the network's    research department as a justification for the success it had among male viewers.    <a name="_ftnref14"></a><a href="#_ftn14"><sup>14</sup></a>  Its allusion to    daily life, contemporary affairs and elements of culture that are national in    scope, a recurrent convention in the <i>Rede Globo </i>network's eight o'clock    telenovelas  since 1969, offers a suggestive explanation for the fact that these    soaps were able to reach out to such a wide variety of viewers. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Irmãos Coragem</i> makes reference to soccer    and to the tension between the rural environment of the small town and the metropolitan    environment of the big city. This legendary telenovela opposes models of women    who take initiative, yet continue to be submissive, to women who are liberated    but perverted. Unlike  <i>Irmãos Coragem</i>, <i>Selva de Pedra</i> portrays    women who are independent and professionally successful. In both telenovelas,    sex and marriage are linked to procreation, a connection that loosens in the    telenovelas that follow, acompanying changes in customs revealed through widely    commented demographic tendencies. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Analyzing several telenovelas in perspective,    parallel to their allusions to social and political processes, it becomes possible    to detect a trajectory of growing liberalization of women's roles. Over the    years, female <i>telenovela</i> characters evolve from women "made for marriage"    and potential mothers to women who are determined to make their own way.  The    female protagonists of  <i>Irmãos Coragem </i>became wives and mothers. The    one exception, Potira, left her marriage to seek fulfillment in love with a    stepbrother, but was punished with death.  <i>Selva de Pedra </i>introduces    a protagonist who achieves professional fulfillment independently – and perhaps    because far away –from  her husband. It is worth noting that her profession    belongs to a domain generally associated with women, that of the arts, and the    telenovela does not problematize the relations between marriage, maternity and    work.  In <i>Os Gigantes </i>("The Giants"), the protagonist, who had opted    for professional fulfillment as a foreign correspondent in detriment of family,    is in the end forced back by family circumstances.  Her capitulation in the    face of the need to manage family patrimony and generate an heir leads to her    final madness and death.  <i>Roque Santeiro</i> introduced the paradigmatic    figure Porcina, determined, extravagant, and free in love. In <i>Vale Tudo </i>there    is a range of different possibilities for women.  Some work in glamourous professions    such as fashion, direct business firms or construct professional independence    based on a highly feminized knowledge, that of culinary arts. Others initiate    a career later in life, after separation. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Problems related to women's role in society,    in the family and at work constitute a privileged source of themes that are    considered "provocative". Over the course of these years, second marriages,    sex outside of marriage or unconnected to procriation become common in telenovela    repertory. Although the content of this liberalizing trajectory may  be associated    with the ideas promoted by the feminist movement, it can hardly be classified    as "feminist". The word "feminist" does not appear within the text of the telenovelas    or within television viewers' comments. Although the term <i>"machista" </i>is    mentioned in connection with telenovelas within the context of reception studies    and discussion group reports -in conjunction with negative characterizations    of jealous or controlling men - the women who oppose such behavior are referred    to simply as "strong".  This is not just a matter of nomenclature. The treatment    that telenovelas give to gender relations suggests the widening of the spectrum    of possibilities for women, and in a certain sense, the atrophy of possibilities    available to men, yet there is no problematization of gender relations properly    speaking. The distribution of domestic chores and those related to childrearing,    for example, a delicate topic in the universe of gender relations, is not dealt    with within these telenovelas. Within the world of televised fiction, the expansion    of female domains includes growing appreciation for womens' labor market participation,    yet the greatest emphasis is placed on the widening of that which is considered    morally permissible. Telenovelas legitimate the separation of women who are    unhappy in their marriages and their further romantic envolvement. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Reception studies suggest that positively valued    female characters are those that cry little and confront adversity with grace.    Female characters frequently undergo <i>transformation </i>over the course of    the story, and it may be accurate to say that  telenovela mobilizes fans around    the metamorphosis of characters. Some of them begin the telenovela as dependent    women, such as actress Regina Duarte's character Rachel in <i>Vale Tudo</i>,    who undergoes a series of trials and tribulations:   ill treatment at the hands    of a husband who drinks too much, is absent and a poor provider, separation,    return to her father's house in the town of Iguaçu with daughter in tow,  to    the "turn" that takes place when she becomes a tourist guide, her father's death,    her daughter's betrayal (she proceeds to run off with the money from the sale    of their home),  arrival in Rio de Janeiro in search of the daughter where she    becomes a beachside sandwich vendor, her ex-husband's death, amorous troubles,    unredeemed daughter, the imprisonment of  her partner who in a moment of weakness    betrayed her, her forgiveness  and  pledge to wait for him – all leading up    to a triumphant happy ending showing her happily devoted to raising her grandson.    The character's trajectory involves a tale of social climbing that is based    on her own talent and resourcefulness.  Her <i>transformation </i>from fragile,    suffering housewife to strong, successful entrepreneur is expressed in her change    in wardrobe, in the scenarios within which she lives and works, and the romantic    harmony of the ending. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The reward of her success in almost all realms    of existence – with the exception of motherhood, although this is made up for    by the full exercise of her role as grandmother, since she acquires the legal    right to raise her unrehabilitated daughter's son - is presented as the exclusive    merit of her good nature and perseverance.  The gains are moral, and the obstacles    that must be overturned – such as her first husband's failure and the machinations    of the story's villains – are also located within the realm of the moral.  There    is no real gender discrimination to be confronted.  The "strong" and "liberated"    woman of the telenovela does not demand equal conditions, wages or quotas.     Laws, actions and special police divisions that cater to women's needs do not    appear. The exploitation of bodies in that sort of  "anything goes" that <i>Vale    Tudo </i>("Anything Goes") deals with is presented as an effective strategy    both for female and male bodies.  The figure of the <i>gigolo</i> in the character    César (Carlos Alberto Ricelli) makes this clear</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Telenovelas</i> and serials such as <i>Malu    Mulher </i>achieved success associating women's liberation with a certain notion    of  female "strength", as women free themselves from exclusive dependence on    men. Situated within the depoliticized universe of domestic matters, the trajectory    of liberalization became possible during and in spite of the strong censorship    imposed by the military regime. Since it hardly unsettles gender relations per    sé, the telenovela provides legitimacy for the <i>superwoman </i>model:  she    who accumulates both the traditional functions of wife and mother and those    of provider.  This is a result that in many ways can be considered perverse.    </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">It is striking that telenovelas' portrayal of    a Brazil that is much whiter and much richer than it really is was understood    as a verisimilar portrait of an unequal country whose population is largely    of color or mixed-race.  It is possible that this verisimilitude has to do     with a  coherence that is constructed not around the illusion of spectacular    representation but around the allusion  to different elements of the conjuncture,    from fashion to politics,  as references to the extra-diegetic universe that    sustain the verisimilitude of the plot. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The peak of references to Brazil may very well    be in the year 1990, when another major network, <i>Rede Manchete</i> aired    <i>Pantanal, </i>a telenovela that reverberated and hit high ratings during    evening hours after the customary "eight o' clock soap". It is significant that    the network's feat involved the telenovela <i>Pantanal </i>which presented an    alternative view of the country that also made use of alternative formal conventions.    <i>Pantanal </i>provided a visual alternative <i> </i>to perturbed urban scenes.    It appealed to a search for roots "in the heart of Brazil", in the exotic landscapes    of the back country. Long takes of rural landscapes with clear and unpolluted    water and dense vegetation gesture toward the possibility of redemption from    the harsh urban environment of the large metropolis. The bucolic scenery is    curiously associated with female nudity and the recomposition of the family    around the figure of the patriarch and his sons. </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="3"><b>3 From the 1990s on: diversifying the Brazilian    television industry.</b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><i>Pantanal</i> marks the end of an era. During    the 1990s, thematic and formal conventions diversified. References which during    many years consolidated the telenovela as a showcase of fashion, news and behavior    assumed the explicit role of intervention in telenovelas that took on the character    of constructions of representation; or, better put, that revealed, at least    partially, the mechanisms behind the construction of representation and gave    telenovelas themselves the status of initiating polemics.  Mothers of missing    children actually recovered their children thanks to campaigns carried out within    the telenovela <i>Explode Coração </i>(which could be translated roughly as    "Bursting Heart") <i> </i>The exhibition of missing children's images led television    viewers to get in touch with the broadcaster with clues as to the whereabouts    of some of these children. The  broadcaster, in turn, followed through on the    cases, acting as a more efficient intermediary that the police or the judiciary.     This social action was well-capitalized on through its dissemination in news    broadcasts that followed through on the evolution of these searches and their    outcomes, as supplementary chapters of the telenovelas - digressions in which    the theme of identity revelation remains on the agenda.  Another case of intervention,    this time within the political arena, was due to the visibility that the telenovela    <i>O Rei do Gado </i>(literally, "The Cattle King") gave to landless rural workers.     More recently, <i>O Clone </i>("The Clone") intervened around the issue of drugs,    legitimating the issue of their de-criminalization. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The reality shows that following a worldwide    tendency gradually won ground in Brazil during the 1990s radicalized these tendencies    that were already present in telenovelas.  The reality show may be understood    as an outgrowth of the telenovela, a sort of "telenovela without a script",    a game that thrives on the most banal of intrigues, a narrative that establishes    itself, at least in its most consolidated Brazilian version, through its editing.    </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The first program of this genre in Brazil appraised    the around-the-clock daily life of young actors and actresses who were at the    start of their careers or whose careers had for some reason suffered setbacks.    Successive versions gesture toward the possibility of fame and success in na     acting career. The futility of everyday relations are the theme of each daily    chapter.  Basic rules on the "elimination" of participants guarantee a device    that propels the plot according to the combination of participants' and viewers'    votes. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Radicalizing the mechanisms of distorted mediation    present in telenovelas, reality shows indicate the more explicit constitution    of networks.  In the first version of the reality show <i>Casa dos Artists -    </i>perhaps the most successful of its type - the interaction of gymkhana participants    within the house was made available to television viewers via satellite transmission    in real time, live and unedited. An edited chapter with the best moments of    the day went on air during prime time.  Each Sunday the network was further    widened through "elimination" sessions conducted live by television host Silvio    Santos, who mediated the relationship of the acteurs in the house, those watching    his show and home viewers. Widening the scope of his network, Santos commented    on news from the press and at times carried on a live dialog with his colleague    at network headquarters. From one broadcaster to another. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In conclusion,<i> telenovelas</i>, understood    as "proto-interactive" programs that presuppose unequal and distorted mediation    processes - a synergy in which the representation of gender relations play a    preponderant role,  as intrinsec part of a broader process of the expansion    of a universe conventionally defined as feminine- may be seen to anticipate    the media phenomena that mark contemporary societies.  </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2">A special issue of the journal <i>Screen</i>    which was devoted to analysis of the media dimensions of manifestations that    unfolded in relation to the death of Princess Diana offers several suggestive    texts that corroborate our observations on telenovelas and  the earlier    mentioned analyses of the role of media.  The essays suggest elements such as    interactivity, connection and live performance as keys to understanding the    compulsion that pushed hordes of British citizens out into the streets to manifest    their sorrow over the princesses' death. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In her article, the volume's editor, Christine    Geraghty, begins from the idea suggested by  literature of feminist inspiration    that <i>telenovelas</i>, in the words of the author, "Most crucially reversed    traditional values by privileging the feminine world in which emotion, empathy    and talk were the means by which life could best be understood and managed"<a name="_ftnref15"></a><a href="#_ftn15"><sup>15</sup></a>    She goes on to observe that Diana had been shocking because of her  novelesque    mobilization of  personal narrative within public space.  Geraghty specifically    cites the famous interview that Diana conceded on Panorama, a prestigious British    television program.  In this interview the princess, invested with functions    of representing the United Kingdom, used the space customarily devoted to political    and social issues to speak of her personal life, in terms which mobilized the    language of  romance. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The author observes that, during most of her    married life, "Diana was literally speechless:  it was clearly  her person,    her body, which was the news."<a name="_ftnref16"></a><a href="#_ftn16"><sup>16</sup></a>.     In breaking through her muteness, Diana also breaks with other conventions.    Her interview in Panorama is for Geraghty a privileged example of how the media    have a peculiar way of synthesizing political and personal, public and private    subjective experiences. The impact and fascination that Diana provoked could    thus be seen as related not to the specific contents of her speech but to the    dislocations of repertories that it carried out bringing elements of her private    life into the political arena, elements related to romance and betrayal, thematic    dislocation along the line of what authors mentioned at the beginning of  my    presentation, such as Andreas Huyssen and Joshua Meyrowitz suggest.   </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">In some regard, the dislocation of repertories    operated by Diana and expressed in Panorama may help to explain the collective    mobilization that her death unleashed, with thousands of participants making    a point – perhaps a bit like Diana herself had done – of demonstrating their    involvement through their physical presence, justified  as a way of experiencing    her wake and funeral in their totality.  Once again, "television offered a better    view, but not the smell of flowers, the touch of the crowds".<a name="_ftnref17"></a><a href="#_ftn17"><sup>17</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The author makes the ironic observation that    participants used microphones and television polls to communicate to those who    were not there what it was that they were missing out on, thus emphasizing the    insistent relevance of physical presence, of live witness and of real experience    that no virtual spectacle is capable of substituting. In a way that is similar    to Geraghty, Roger Silverstone, another one of the writers included in this    special issue of <i>Screen</i> magazine<i>,</i><a name="_ftnref18"></a><a href="#_ftn18"><sup>18</sup></a>    attempts to understand why in the end thousands of people flowed out onto the    streets to manifest their solidarity with a celebrity who had been deposed of    institutional power, with no constituted leadership or defined cause. For Silverstone,    it was the desire to participate that propelled people onto the streets.  And    in his view, this sense of participation had, to some extent, to do with  what    he calls an "epistemological rupture". In other words, upon abandoning the position    of spectator, people who went out onto the streets left the realm of representation    in order to move into the realm of experience itself. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Silverstone is interested in what he has termed    <i>appropriation of media space. </i>His approach is interesting, since he is    not satisfied with a simplistic solution like those that eliminate distinctions    between reality and fantasy, true and false, fact and fiction.  For Silverstone,    the absence of these distinctions would degrade experience. If we no longer    differentiate fact and fiction, experience becomes exactly the same as non-experience.    Yet the events surrounding Diana's death  suggest that experience has maintained    its appeal. The fenomenon that was created around her death leads these authors    to rethink relations between subject and object, broadcaster and receiver. Eagerness    to participate, to abandon the mere position of receiver, propelled people outside    their homes, into public space,  where they could be captured by television    cameras.  This generalized predisposition for performance raises questions about    existing conceptual models. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Interaction, connection, live collective performance,    participation, appropriation, emotion, empathy, and romance are all elements    that Geraghty and Silverstone bring out regarding the manifestations of sorrow    that followed the princesses' death. These are elements that come close to what    Brecht identified as classic theater  (in opposition to its epic versions).     <a name="_ftnref19"></a><a href="#_ftn19"><sup>19</sup></a>  These are elements    that Adorno has described as intrinsec tools of the culture industry, mechanisms    employed to guarantee and sustain the alienation that it perpetuates. These    are elements that in Andreas Huyssen's archeology appear linked to the feminine    universe of mass culture. These same elements reappear now as elements of people's    – men and women, politicians and characters – involvement with the media.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">The current state of research demands an approach    that incorporates the endogenous logic that reigns within the media as well    as the ways in which it is situated in relation to economic and social powers    and other dimensions of life.  The desire for direct participation, performance    and interaction, that <i>utopia of immediate communication</i> that Spigel describes,    or the <i>effort to problematize everyday experience</i>, as Marlyse Meyer<a name="_ftnref20"></a><a href="#_ftn20"><sup>20</sup></a>    phrases the problem in her book on the feuilleton, constitute useful notions    for our understanding of the fascination that the  telenovela exerted over the    20 years that marked its golden age.  These notions also offer clues that may    help us come to grips with the global appeal that television reality-shows have    today. This is the issue of immediate connection, which incorporates the public    and breaks, to a certain extent, with the stagnant relationship between those    on the stage and those in the audience, author and work, exhibition and reception,    suggesting the desire for networking.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Programs that offer ordinary citizens the possibility    to participate in the world of spectacle as long as they are willing to share    their harshest personal stories contribute to  spreading the melodramatic narrative    over the widest range of spheres of social life. We need to research formats    and means that go beyond these registers. Television and diverse media vehicles    cater to people's desire for relations without intermediaries. Television and    much more radically, the Internet offer means for social integration – or desintegration,    as Virilio<a name="_ftnref21"></a><a href="#_ftn21"><sup>21</sup></a> would    have it – that sidestep traditional mediating institutions.  </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">This vocation to stimulate the desire for participation    is related to the formal technical apparatus of the electronic medium, with    the formal connections and messages incorporated into the texts and the particular    ways in which this medium captures and expresses conjunctural events and debates    at particular moments in time and space. Over time, television viewers and producers    have come to agree on certain conceptions and formats.  They share some definitions    which become almost natural. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2">In Brazil during the 1970s and 1980s, telenovelas    had a very similar role.  Television viewers of all social classes, men and    women of the most varied age groups, inhabitants of the diverse geographical    regions reached by television broadcasting watched the serials. Male and female    television viewers speculated on the unfolding of the storyline; they knew that    every evening at a certain time, new episodes would be aired.  Over the years,    the cast, as well as the formal conventions of a genre that evolved according    to what producers imagined the expectations of viewers would be, became recognized    as elements of a repertory shared by spectators living all over the Brazil,    belonging to a wide range of social segments and age groups, men and women,    people with different sexual orientations. Producers created certain mechanisms    to measure television viewers' opinions on their favorite serials. Television    viewers also thought up their own mechanisms for participating in this proto-interactive    dynamic. <i>Telenovelas</i> became a  prevailing lexicon for national public    communication. </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"> In some regard, in watching and commenting on    the unfolding plots of telenovelas,  people are able to develop mediations between    their experiences in public and private life. It is as if <i>telenovelas</i>    offer a repertory that makes it possible to associate domestic dramas, such    as violent passions, and social behavior that is considered more or less legitimate.      . </font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Over the course of the years,<i> telenovelas</i>    have captured and expressed a certain expansion of the universe that is conventionally    defined as feminine. This expansion indicates an increase in and  diversification    of possibilities for women.  Recently, examples of plots that legitimate homosexual    relationships corroborate this movement, suggesting that the stretching of boundaries    continues. This expansion of what is considered legitimate within a space conventionally    defined as feminine meshes with the mechanisms that the different authors that    I have referred to throughout this presentation discuss, as they accompany the    eruption of analogous mechanisms in other parts of the globe.  We should however    remember that this expansion also captures and expresses the perverse elements    of this widening of  possibilities, to the extent that conflicts related to    gender discrimination have remained relatively unproblematized. </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="3"><b>Bibliographic references</b></font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">APPADURAI, Arjun.<i> Modernity at Large. </i>Minneapolis:    Universit of Minnesota Press, 1999.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">BENJAMIN, Walter. "What is Epic Theater." In:    ______. <i>Illuminations</i>. New York: Shocken Books, 1985[1969]. p. 147-154.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">BERQUÓ, Elza. "Arranjos familiares no Brasil:    uma visão demográfica". In: SCHWARCZ, Lilia (Org.). <i>Historia da vida    privada</i>. São Paulo: Cia. das Letras, 1998. n. IV. p. 411-438.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">BROOKS, Peter. <i>The Melodramatic Imagination:    Balzac, Henry James and the Mode of Excess. </i>New Haven: Yale University Press,    1986.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">COMAROFF, Jean, and COMAROFF, John. <i>Modernity    and its Malcontents – Ritual and Power in Postcolonial Africa.</i> Chicago:    The University of Chicago Press, 1992.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">FRASER, Nancy. "Rethinking the Public Sphere:    A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy." <i>Social Text</i>,    n. 25/26, 1990. p. 56-80.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">GERAGHTY, Christine et al. "Special Debate. Flowers    and Tears: the Death of Diana, Princess of Wales." <i>Screen</i>, v. 39, n.    1, 1998. </font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">GLEDHILL, Christine. "The Melodramatic Field:    An Investigation." In: GLEDHILL, Christine (ed.). <i>Home Is Where the Heart    Is</i>. London: BFI, 1987. p. 5-42.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">HAMBURGER, Esther. "Indústria cultural brasileira    vista daqui e de fora". In: MICELI, Sérgio (Org.). <em>O que ler na Ciência    Social brasileira</em>. São Paulo: ANPOCS/Editora Sumaré; Brasília: Capes, 2002.    p. 53-84.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">______. <i>O Brasil antenado: a sociedade da    novela.</i> Rio de Janeiro: Zahar, 2005.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">HANSEN, Miriam. <i>Babel &amp; Babylon: Spectatorship    in American Silent Film</i>. Cambridge, Ma: Harvard University Press, 1990.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">HUYSSEN, Andreas. <i>After the Great Divider:    Modernism, Mass Culture, Post-modernism</i>. Bloomington: Indiana University    Press, 1986.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">JOYRICH, Lynne. <i>Reviewing Reception: Television,    Gender and Postmodern Culture</i>. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press,    1996.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">LEAL, Ondina Fachel. <i>A leitura social da novela    das oito. </i>Petrópolis, RJ: Vozes, 1986.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">MEYER, Marlyse. <i>Folhetim: uma história. </i>São    Paulo: Cia. das Letras, 1996.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">MEYROWITZ, Joshua. <i>No Sense of Place</i>.    Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">MICELI, Sonia Maria Pessoa de Barros. <i>Imitação    da vida</i>. 1974. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciências Sociais) – Departamento    de Ciências Sociais, Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, Universidade    de São Paulo, 1974.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">MODLESKI, Tania. <i>Loving with a Vengeance:    Mass-Produced Fantasies for Women</i>. New York: Metheun. 1984.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">______. "Introduction." In: MODLESKI,    Tania (ed.). <i>Studies in Entertainment: Critical Approaches to Mass Culture</i>.    Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 1986.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">MULVEY, Laura. "Visual Pleasure and Narrative    Cinema." <i>Screen</i>, v. 16, n. 3, 1975. p. 6-18.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">______. "Melodrama In and Out of the Home." In:    MACCABE, Colin (ed.). <i>High Theory/Low Culture: Analyzing Popular Television    and Film</i>. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986. p. 80-100. </font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">ORTIZ, Renato. <i>A moderna tradição brasileira</i>.    São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1987.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">ORTIZ, Renato et al. <i>Telenovela, história    e produção. </i>São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1988.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">PRADO, Rosane Manhães. <i>Mulher de novela e    mulher de verdade: estudo sobre cidade pequena, mulher e telenovela</i>. 1987.    Dissertação (Mestrado em Antropologia) –  Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal    do Rio de Janeiro, 1987.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">SAHLINS, Marshall. <i>How "Natives" Think</i>.    Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1995.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">SARQUES, Jane. <i>A ideologia sexual dos gigantes.    </i>Goiânia: Editora da UFG, 1986.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">SPIGEL, Lynn<i>. Making Room for TV/Television    an the Family Ideal in Postwar America</i>. Chicago and London: The University    of Chicago Press, 1992.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">SPIGEL, Lynn, and MANN, Denise (eds.). <i>Private    Screenings</i>. Minneapolis: University of Minneapolis Press, 1992.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">VIRILIO, Paul. <i>Guerra e cinema.</i> São Paulo:    Scritta Editorial, 1984.</font><!-- ref --><p><font face="verdana" size="2">XAVIER, Ismail. <i>O olhar e a cena.</i> São    Paulo: Cosac &amp; Naify, 2003.</font><p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">Received in May 2006 and accepted for publication    in November, 2006</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2"><a name="_ftn1"></a><a href="#_ftnref1">1</a> This    text was presented as the Opening Conference for the First Brazilian Symposium    on Gender and Media which took place in Curitiba in August of 2005.  I would    like to express my gratitude to the organizers of the event, both for the invitation    and their initiative in promoting the event.  The article elaborates on ideas    and aspects I have presented in earlier works, and in particular, my book <i>O    Brasil Antenado: A Sociedade da Novela   </i> (Hamburger, 2005).      <br>   <a name="_ftn2"></a><a href="#_ftnref2">2</a> In this case, culture, usually concentrated on the    treatment of discrete issues, recognizes the confrontation entre transnational    flows and persistent local identities, constructed through particular cultural    idioms and takes on new controversial meanings. See, in this regard, works such    as  Marshall SAHLINS, 1995; Jean COMAROFF e John COMAROFF, 1992; Arjun    APPADURAI, 1996.    <br>   <a name="_ftn3"></a><a href="#_ftnref3">3</a> Telenovelas are daily prime    time soaps, that in Brazil are broadcast six nights a week. Telenovelas have    limited duration: each production lasts from six to eight months.    <br>   <a name="_ftn4"></a><a href="#_ftnref4">4</a> HUYSSEN, 1986.    <br>   <a name="_ftn5"></a><a href="#_ftnref5">5</a> MULVEY, 1975 e 1986; MODLESKI,    1984 e 1986; FRASER, 1990; e HANSEN, 1990.    <br>   <a name="_ftn6"></a><a href="#_ftnref6">6</a> Melodrama in itself constitutes a vast field for    research. For the purposes of our discussion here, it is enough to situate the    debate and present a sketch of the major formal conventions of television melodrama,    a set of characteristics that will serve our analysis of specific soap operas    that I will go on to discuss in the second part of this text. For a synthesis    of the different uses that are associated with the melodramatic mode, see Christine    GLEDHILL, 1987; for a literary study that inspired feminist works, see Peter    BROOKS, 1986; for a Brazilian debate on the realist or melodramatic lineage    of soap operas, see Renato ORTIZ, 1987, and  Renato ORTIZ et al., 1988;  for    a recent contribution that demonstrates the melodramatic structure of a mini-series,    see  Ismail XAVIER, 2003.    <br>   <a name="_ftn7"></a><a href="#_ftnref7">7</a> In particular, see Lynn SPIGEL, 1992; Lynn SPIGEL    and Denise MANN, 1992; and Lynne JOYRICH, 1996.    <br>   <a name="_ftn8"></a><a href="#_ftnref8">8</a> JOYRICH, 1996, p. 46.    <br>   <a name="_ftn9"></a><a href="#_ftnref9">9</a> MEYROWITZ, 1984.    <br>   <a name="_ftn10"></a><a href="#_ftnref10">10</a> For a synthesis of recent    demographic changes, see Elza  BERQUÓ, 1998.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="_ftn11"></a><a href="#_ftnref11">11</a> MICELI, 1974; LEAL, 1986;    SARQUES, 1986; and PRADO, 1987.    <br>   <a name="_ftn12"></a><a href="#_ftnref12">12</a> Brazilian idiom for "melodrama".     <br>   <a name="_ftn13"></a><a href="#_ftnref13">13</a> Ver HAMBURGER, 2002.    <br>   <a name="_ftn14"></a><a href="#_ftnref14">14</a> See, for example,  ORTIZ    et al., 1988, p. 101.    <br>   <a name="_ftn15"></a><a href="#_ftnref15">15</a> GERAGHTY et al., 1998,    p. 71.    <br>   <a name="_ftn16"></a><a href="#_ftnref16">16</a> GERAGHTY et al., 1998,    p. 71.    <br>   <a name="_ftn17"></a><a href="#_ftnref17">17</a> GERAGHTY et al., 1998,    p. 71.    <br>   <a name="_ftn18"></a><a href="#_ftnref18">18</a> GERAGHTY et al., 1998.    <br>   <a name="_ftn19"></a><a href="#_ftnref19">19</a> Ver Walter BENJAMIN, 1985,    p. 147-154.    <br>   <a name="_ftn20"></a><a href="#_ftnref20">20</a> MEYER, 1996.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="_ftn21"></a><a href="#_ftnref21">21</a> Paul VIRILIO, 1984.</font></p>      ]]></body><back>
<ref-list>
<ref id="B1">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[APPADURAI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Arjun]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Modernity at Large]]></source>
<year>1999</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Minneapolis ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Universit of Minnesota Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B2">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[APPADURAI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Arjun]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[What is Epic Theater]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Illuminations]]></source>
<year>1985</year>
<page-range>147-154</page-range><publisher-loc><![CDATA[New York ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Shocken Books]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B3">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[BERQUÓ]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Elza]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Arranjos familiares no Brasil: uma visão demográfica]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[SCHWARCZ]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Lilia]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Historia da vida privada]]></source>
<year>1998</year>
<page-range>411-438</page-range><publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Cia. das Letras]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B4">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[BROOKS]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Peter]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James and the Mode of Excess]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[New Haven ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Yale University Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B5">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[COMAROFF]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Jean]]></given-names>
</name>
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[COMAROFF]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[John]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Modernity and its Malcontents: Ritual and Power in Postcolonial Africa]]></source>
<year>1992</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Chicago ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[The University of Chicago Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B6">
<nlm-citation citation-type="journal">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[FRASER]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Nancy]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy]]></article-title>
<source><![CDATA[Social Text]]></source>
<year>1990</year>
<numero>25/26</numero>
<issue>25/26</issue>
<page-range>56-80</page-range></nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B7">
<nlm-citation citation-type="journal">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[GERAGHTY]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Christine]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Special Debate: Flowers and Tears: the Death of Diana, Princess of Wales]]></article-title>
<source><![CDATA[Screen]]></source>
<year>1998</year>
<volume>39</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<issue>1</issue>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B8">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[GLEDHILL]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Christine]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[The Melodramatic Field: An Investigation]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[GLEDHILL]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Christine]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Home Is Where the Heart Is]]></source>
<year>1987</year>
<page-range>5-42</page-range><publisher-loc><![CDATA[London ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[BFI]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B9">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[HAMBURGER]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Esther]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Indústria cultural brasileira vista daqui e de fora]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MICELI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Sérgio]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[O que ler na Ciência Social brasileira]]></source>
<year>2002</year>
<page-range>53-84</page-range><publisher-loc><![CDATA[São PauloBrasília ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[ANPOCSEditora SumaréCapes]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B10">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[HAMBURGER]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Esther]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[O Brasil antenado: a sociedade da novela]]></source>
<year>2005</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Rio de Janeiro ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Zahar]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B11">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[HANSEN]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Miriam]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Babel & Babylon: Spectatorship in American Silent Film]]></source>
<year>1990</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Cambridge^eMa Ma]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Harvard University Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B12">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[HUYSSEN]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Andreas]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[After the Great Divider: Modernism, Mass Culture, Post-modernism]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Bloomington ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Indiana University Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B13">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[JOYRICH]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Lynne]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Reviewing Reception: Television, Gender and Postmodern Culture]]></source>
<year>1996</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Bloomington ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[University of Indiana Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B14">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[LEAL]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Ondina Fachel]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[A leitura social da novela das oito]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Petrópolis^eRJ RJ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Vozes]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B15">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MEYER]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Marlyse]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Folhetim: uma história]]></source>
<year>1996</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Cia. das Letras]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B16">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MEYROWITZ]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Joshua]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[No Sense of Place]]></source>
<year>1984</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Oxford ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Oxford University Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B17">
<nlm-citation citation-type="">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MICELI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Sonia Maria Pessoa de Barros]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Imitação da vida]]></source>
<year>1974</year>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B18">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MODLESKI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Tania]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Loving with a Vengeance: Mass-Produced Fantasies for Women]]></source>
<year>1984</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[New York ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Metheun]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B19">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MODLESKI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Tania]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Introduction]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MODLESKI]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Tania]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Studies in Entertainment: Critical Approaches to Mass Culture]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Bloomington ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[University of Indiana Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B20">
<nlm-citation citation-type="journal">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MULVEY]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Laura]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema]]></article-title>
<source><![CDATA[Screen]]></source>
<year>1975</year>
<volume>16</volume>
<numero>3</numero>
<issue>3</issue>
<page-range>6-18</page-range></nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B21">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MULVEY]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Laura]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Melodrama In and Out of the Home]]></article-title>
<person-group person-group-type="editor">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MACCABE]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Colin]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[High Theory/Low Culture: Analyzing Popular Television and Film]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<page-range>80-100</page-range><publisher-loc><![CDATA[Manchester ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Manchester University Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B22">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[ORTIZ]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Renato]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[A moderna tradição brasileira]]></source>
<year>1987</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Brasiliense]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B23">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[ORTIZ]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Renato]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Telenovela, história e produção]]></source>
<year>1988</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Brasiliense]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B24">
<nlm-citation citation-type="">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[PRADO]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Rosane Manhães]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Mulher de novela e mulher de verdade: estudo sobre cidade pequena, mulher e telenovela]]></source>
<year>1987</year>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B25">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[SAHLINS]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Marshall]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[How "Natives" Think]]></source>
<year>1995</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[ChicagoLondon ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[The University of Chicago Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B26">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[SARQUES]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Jane]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[A ideologia sexual dos gigantes]]></source>
<year>1986</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Goiânia ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Editora da UFG]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B27">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[SPIGEL]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Lynn]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Making Room for TV/Television an the Family Ideal in Postwar America]]></source>
<year>1992</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[ChicagoLondon ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[The University of Chicago Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B28">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[SPIGEL]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Lynn]]></given-names>
</name>
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[MANN]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Denise]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Private Screenings]]></source>
<year>1992</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[Minneapolis ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[University of Minneapolis Press]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B29">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[VIRILIO]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Paul]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[Guerra e cinema]]></source>
<year>1984</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Scritta Editorial]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
<ref id="B30">
<nlm-citation citation-type="book">
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[XAVIER]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Ismail]]></given-names>
</name>
</person-group>
<source><![CDATA[O olhar e a cena]]></source>
<year>2003</year>
<publisher-loc><![CDATA[São Paulo ]]></publisher-loc>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Cosac & Naify]]></publisher-name>
</nlm-citation>
</ref>
</ref-list>
</back>
</article>
