@article{ART002495889},
author={Jungok Lee},
title={Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature},
journal={Journal of Popular Narrative},
issn={1738-3188},
year={2019},
volume={25},
number={3},
pages={349-383},
doi={10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010}
TY - JOUR
AU - Jungok Lee
TI - Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature
JO - Journal of Popular Narrative
PY - 2019
VL - 25
IS - 3
PB - The Association of Popular Narrative
SP - 349
EP - 383
SN - 1738-3188
AB - This paper examined the meaning and task of romance research with a focus on Reading the Romance(1984) by Janice A. Radway. This book, which analyzes romance texts by examining the situation and meaning of reading romance by women readers integrating between cultural studies and literary studies, is one of the most popular studies on the romance genre.
Radway scrutinized the practical significance of reading romance in a community of women readers. Through a study involving questionnaires and in-depth interviews, she found that for women, romance reading is a ‘compensatory fiction’ that brings happiness and emotional redemption through a sense of liberation achieved by escaping from patriarchal daily life. The romance that women prefer is composed of 4 stages and 13 divisions: ‘Encounter → Attest → Recovery → Happy End’. It also maintains a formula that begins with an immature female character’s identity crisis and ends with a blissful union that recognizes the intrinsic value of the main character, who has turned into a man who is considerate of the women. Therefore, romance plays the role of pursuit of the ‘female utopian fantasy’ and at the same time a reconciliation of women to patriarchy.
Feminist critics of the day criticized this argument. However, reading romance is a ‘feminine reading’, and romance is literature about the functional relationship between women’s lives and patriarchy. Yet the interpretation could differ depending on the different viewpoints and definitions of the women’s utopian fantasy.
In recent years, the conditions of female reader’s lives, awareness and imagination have been changing rapidly. As a result, the female utopian fantasy has also changed significantly. Nevertheless, women’s lives in the real patriarchal system are still contradictory, and their adventurous imagination is spreading in alternative spaces such as the subculture. In this regard, the question is about the definition of romance and the meanings of romance research are still important task.
KW - romance;reading romance;patriarchy;community of women readers;female utopian fantasy;compensatory fiction;compensatory interchangeability;patriarchal marriage
DO - 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
ER -
Jungok Lee. (2019). Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature. Journal of Popular Narrative, 25(3), 349-383.
Jungok Lee. 2019, "Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature", Journal of Popular Narrative, vol.25, no.3 pp.349-383. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee "Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature" Journal of Popular Narrative 25.3 pp.349-383 (2019) : 349.
Jungok Lee. Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature. 2019; 25(3), 349-383. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee. "Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature" Journal of Popular Narrative 25, no.3 (2019) : 349-383.doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee. Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature. Journal of Popular Narrative, 25(3), 349-383. doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee. Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature. Journal of Popular Narrative. 2019; 25(3) 349-383. doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee. Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature. 2019; 25(3), 349-383. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010
Jungok Lee. "Reader-Response Criticism about the Functional relation of Romance, Women and Patriarchy—Based on Janice A. Radway’s Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature" Journal of Popular Narrative 25, no.3 (2019) : 349-383.doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.3.010