Summary: Feminism In Hollywood

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Pages: 5

Feminism in Hollywood
The Huffington Post published an article on May 27th, 2014 by author, editor, journalist, and blogger Heather Wood Rudulph entitled “Feminism Is More Than What Young Hollywood Thinks About It.” While the Huffington Post has liberal leanings, Rudulph’s work has been published in titles ranging from Cosmopolitan to The Guardian. She is a knowledgeable and respected source on feminism, and women’s culture and politics. Her stance on feminism offers a bias to the topic being approached, but also makes her an interesting voice on the current issue of feminism in media. In fact, as well as cofounding a feminist magazine and releasing a book in 2013, Rudulph is also an Adjunct Professor of Journalism at American River College.
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She explains that it is unfair to force these girls into embracing or rejecting the feminist label, because either way they have to deal with a backlash from the media and public even though much of what they say comes from a thrown together view of what they gather feminism to be. Rudulph addresses an article recently published in the New York Times which offers the question “do these responses even matter?” Martha Plimpton, a Hollywood TV actress, women’s right activist, and feminist, responded in the Times piece with a resounding yes, of course it matters. Plimpton and Rudulph both agree that while badgering these starlets is getting the movement nowhere fast it is starting to raise the question of what is feminism, which is an important question that needs to be broached. The media needs to start focusing on interrogating feminists about feminism and the movement, the questions that need to be asked have to come from the core of the movement and not just focus on whether one or the other identifies with the movement. Rudulph concludes her article with proffered questions journalists could start asking instead of the standard “Are you a feminist?” She suggests the questions, “Why do women still make less money than men?” or “Why don’t international governments allocate resources to stopping sex slavery and forced marriage?” among