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Issue 51 2010
Gender as the Next Top Model of Global Consumer-Citizenship
By LINDSAY PALMER
[1] At first she looks like a transient, slouching in
an alley. Her hair is disheveled, her face dirty, and her
clothing in disarray. But the sudden flashing of a photographer’s
bulb suggests otherwise. The Manhattan alley in which she poses
looks too clean and the people ambling by her look too well
dressed. From a hidden corner, a director’s voice calls for
tears, demanding that this fashion model deliver an emotionally-charged
performance of homelessness. Behind her, real transients dressed in
haute couture enjoy their quite temporary makeovers. The bulbs
flash, the girls pose, and their diverse stories are streamlined into
spectacle.
[2] In this photo shoot for the CW Television Network’s hit program, America’s Next Top Model,
panic is the spectacle being captured on film. Yet, this is not
the flashy panic of the Hollywood horror picture, or even the private
panic of an individual living on the streets. This is instead
moral panic, a visceral social reaction to the dissolution of the
nation state, fueled by neoliberal politics and exacerbated by a
diverse array of television genres. The globalization of these media
plays a key role in engendering such moral panic, as stabilized
constructs of culture give way to what David Morley terms our
“deterritorialized culture of homelessness.” Morley
interweaves the notion of home with the concept of nation, explaining
how both have destabilized due to increased physical mobility and the
globalization of new communication technologies, “which routinely
transgress the symbolic boundaries around both the private household
and the nation state” (3).
[3] The home has long operated as a site for identity
construction in the United States—as a zone demarcated by boundaries
that designate an inside and an outside and who belongs there.
The home has also served as a prime space in which consumption occurs,
whether it is the necessary consumption of food or the
culturally-driven consumption of glistening appliances like the
Frigidaire. This home space and its important functions have been
assigned a feminine quality both on the smaller level of the suburban
house safeguarded by a conscientious wife and mother figure, as well as
on the level of national rhetoric, where the home is recast as a
feminized nation in need of protection. Because of its originally
strict boundaries, the feminized home-space has, throughout U.S.
history, been conceptualized as an immobile and stable space.
Yet, as Morley asserts, these boundaries are dissolving, aligning
consumption and identity construction with the more fluid demands of
globalization.
[4] Programs like America’s Next Top Model
interrogate the transgression of such boundaries in surprising ways,
thematically aligning gender performance with the American concept of
home, and celebrating mobility—liberated womanhood—while simultaneously
fortifying that womanhood’s borders. Such contradictions are far from
novel, as Diane Cady argues. Cady traces this phenomenon back to the
medieval era when women were characterized as “supposedly passive, yet
potentially powerful,” as transgressive entities that “therefore must
be carefully monitored and contained” (17). Cady also explains how, in
a period when money was viewed with deep suspicion, the writers of the
era would conflate portrayals of women with portrayals of money,
implying that women served as “items of exchange because of some aspect
of their nature,” which was considered just as capricious as the nature
of money itself (27). In other words, the medieval era saw its
own moral panic over the purportedly dual nature of women, as well as
over the new currency that was thought to be capable of transgressing
the boundaries of the old land-based systems even as it was also viewed
as impotent in the face of powerful masculinist and classist traditions.
[5] Current U.S. television programs continue to
conceptually conflate women with money, positing them as powerful yet
dangerous subjects who must also learn to become commodities for
exchange in an era where commodities themselves transgress national
boundaries and reorganize cultural communities. Through the technology
of the makeover contest, America’s Next Top Model posits the
space inside the borders that demarcate femininity—even the “liberated”
femininity of the postfeminist age—as a destination to which all women
must attempt to arrive. America’s Next Top Model is both a
contest program and a traditional makeover program; its characters
undergo physical and psychological refashioning, covertly encouraging
the same transformation in the program’s viewers, who also encounter
this phenomenon in news programs as well as soap operas, sitcoms, and
game shows (Heller 1). Dana Heller attributes the increasing
popularity of the makeover to the twenty-first century political
climate, drawing on Anita Gates’s assertion that “the traditional
importance of home, the post-September 11th hunger for security, and a
growing middle class sense of entitlement” all combine to create a huge
potential audience of diverse individuals eager to write new personal
narratives that guarantee them a stable home within an increasingly
borderless society (qtd. in Heller, 2).
[6] Despite its supposed interest in individualization, America’s Next Top Model
has a specific agenda for each contestant’s, and arguably each viewer’s
newly fashioned narrative. From the Bronx native undergoing
therapy for anger management to the Somalian immigrant overcoming the
trauma of female circumcision, the women of America’s Next Top Model
are encouraged to enhance their differences, with the result that they
take better photographs and glamorize the television program with their
inevitable conflicts. In this sense, America’s Next Top Model
centers personal narrative on the notion of consumption, giving the
illusion of individualization while simultaneously streamlining
difference into a coherent model narrative. This model not only
teaches Americans how to be good global consumers, but it also tells
a story of global citizenship that cultural theorists have explored at
length, with varying results. I will delineate the quite
different arguments of Seyla Benhabib, Néstor García Canclini, and Toby
Miller, in hopes of underscoring the ways in which the interactions
between cultures reinforce the erasure of “culture” and “citizenship”
as stabilized concepts that link notions of belonging with notions of
home. I will then complicate these theorists’ frameworks, showing
how gender’s connection with the concept of home informs the
reconceptualization of belonging in a globalized era. America’s Next Top Model
will serve as my example of this reconceptualization, propagating
narratives of empowering female mobility while still policing the
boundaries of gender in a way that posits femininity as the universal
home to which all modern women belong.
Model Narratives
[7] In her book The Claims of Culture, Seyla
Benhabib compellingly refutes the idea of culture as a coherent home;
yet, she fails to grasp the universalizing implications of her own
argument, positing a purportedly impartial and democratic public sphere
as a space in which women from all cultural origins can write and
rewrite their personal narratives at will. Benhabib
defines cultures as “complex human practices of signification and
representation…which are internally riven by conflicting narratives”
(ix). In other words, Benhabib argues that rather than existing
as discrete entities with original starting-points, cultures are formed
through complex dialogue with other cultures (ix). This dialogue
depends on the notion of narrative. Benhabib explains that
cultures present themselves through narrative because human actions and
relations are, as a rule, formed through a “double hermeneutic: we
identify what we do through an account of what we do” (6
emphasis Benhabib’s). These complex cultural narratives are
always in flux as a result of interaction with conflicting
narratives. Because of this, Benhabib calls for an impartial
public space where cultures can struggle for recognition and even
rewrite themselves without danger of domination (8).
[8] At the heart of this notion is Benhabib’s “norm of
universal respect,” which stipulates that every speaking, rational
creature has equal right to participate in the conversation (14).
Benhabib asserts that maintaining the impartiality of this sphere, as
well as the norm of universal respect on which discourse depends, is
the task of democracy. Thus, Benhabib separates the notion of the
individual from the notion of culture. With these rights understood,
Benhabib claims that a democratic model would generate a safe and
productive space where complex cultures could write and rewrite their
defining narratives and where individuals could break with these
narratives in order to write narratives of their own.
[9] Benhabib derives her notion of the impartial public
sphere from the work of Jürgen Habermas, who, like Benhabib, emphasizes
rationality and universalism. Yet, it is this tendency toward
universalism that masks the inequalities which have always existed in
the formation of the public sphere, which in the 18th century excluded
women as well as anyone who was not white or of the bourgeois class.
Naoki Sakai explains that Habermas attributes this purportedly
impartial space to the “rational” and modern west, which he posits as a
concrete and even ubiquitous entity (Sakai 155). While Habermas
“argues with epistemological confidence in order to reinstall
epistemological confidence in us and make us trust universalism again,”
Sakai, on the other hand, argues that proponents of universalism often
use its rhetoric to rationalize and influence social institutions,
while simultaneously veiling the fact that universalism serves as a
“strategy of dominance by the most advanced particularity” (Sakai
157-8).
[10] This reading of Habermas complicates Benhabib’s
optimistic delineation of the new ways in which cultures can write and
rewrite themselves in a world where old notions of belonging are
dissolving. Benhabib’s tendency to mimic Habermas’s
universalizing rhetoric covers over the inequalities embedded in that
rhetoric, even as she claims to conceptualize a space in which women of
all nations can write their own stories. In other words, Benhabib
puts too much faith in the universal power of narrative, as Nikolis
Kompridis affirms. He states that “narrative is not only the
medium of culture and identity but also of the explanation and
justification of our norms, institutions and practices” (392). If
we looked at narrative from this angle, we would encounter “not a
quasi-transcendental account of normative legitimacy, but a historical
narrative of legitimation” (Kompridis 392). This
legitimation always serves the most advanced particularity, rather than
successfully serving the “humankind” that proves to be far too
multifarious for one such term to properly represent. Such an
observation points to the manipulative power of narrative to override
other narratives; it also points to Benhabib’s failure to adequately
account for one example of this manipulation, which is the narrative of
globalization as modernizing social structure rather than economic
strategy. While Benhabib does speak of the “global
interdependence” of meaning and interpretation in the face of
globalization, she does not discuss the ways in which consumption
drives this interdependence, but rather focuses only on the narratives,
citing the opinion that “our agency consists in our capacity to weave
out of those narratives our individual life stories” (15).
[11] U.S. reality programs like America’s Next Top Model
also put too much faith in the universal power of the life story,
mirroring Benhabib’s claim for narrative agency, and promoting the
notion that the conflict between already existing individualities and
their milieu ultimately leads to healthier subjectivities. The
contradictions between such universalism and the personal narratives
that universalism purportedly protects surface in the program’s
tendency to refer to its contestants on a first-name basis,
manufacturing the personalized intimacy between cast members and
viewers that Alice Leppert and Julie Wilson trace in other reality TV
programs (1), while simultaneously reducing each woman to one name,
flashing at the bottom of the screen. The opening to the program
also functions this way, demanding: “What is beauty to you?” and
setting the tone for the contestants to draw on past and present
experiences in order to make themselves universally beautiful.
For example, the contestant named Fatima cites her experience with
female circumcision, explaining that she wants to be a spokesperson for
other women who have suffered the same assault on their bodies.
She also employs her knowledge of homelessness during the Manhattan
photo-shoot, reminiscing on how the children she once knew in Somalia
made fun of her for living in a shelter. Following Tyra Banks’
instruction to “study yourself and find what is strong and different
and interesting,” Fatima employs her personal narrative to fashion
herself into the aesthetic ideal touted by the most advanced
particularity safeguarding the purportedly impartial space of the
American public sphere.
[12] Just as Benhabib claims that democracy safeguards this public sphere, so America’s Next Top Model claims
to safeguard it, even when one such life story clashes with
another. For example, Fatima’s process of self-realization
collides with that of Marvita, an African-American woman from the
Bronx. She, like Fatima, has experienced homelessness; yet, this
and African ancestry is really all that she and Fatima have in
common. “I’ve never met a mean African,” she tells Fatima in one
of their many arguments on the program. The two contestants fight
about each other’s diction, about each other’s tone of voice, and about
each other’s way of handling personal trauma. After arguing
heatedly for a few episodes, they reach an understanding that results
in the revision of their earlier thoughts on each other. Fatima
comes to understand that Marvita’s brusqueness is due to her growing up
in the Bronx, warding off lascivious relatives as well as violent
peers. In turn, Marvita accepts (despite her inability to fully
understand) Fatima’s circumcision, as well as her particular experience
with homelessness. In this sense, America’s Next Top Model
seems to encourage the sort of contestation and even confrontation that
Benhabib says occurs because of cultural interdependence in a
globalized world (19). Both Fatima and Marvita are encouraged to
embrace and revise their unique narratives, yet to respect each others’
differences as being equally valid.
[13] Yet, these narratives are highly mediated by the
most advanced particularity that wields power over what is finally
revealed as a mere simulation of an already flawed public sphere.
Indeed, the program’s producers and the fashion industry gurus who
influence them take a special interest in narratives centered on race,
encouraging the contestants to embrace and yet transform the racial
origin with which they feel most inclined to identify. For
example, Brittany of cycle eleven identifies herself as being half
African-American and half American Indian. “My ethnicity and my
racial background, it is special to me. But I’m a diverse
person. I want to appeal to everybody,” she says. Similarly,
contestant Sheena announces that she is half Japanese and half Korean,
but that she likes “all colors and all flavors.” While the judges
routinely celebrate the interaction of differing racial narratives,
they especially approve of contestants who stand ready to forget those
narratives—at least for one photo shoot. This ability to embody rather
than simply appreciate diversity not only proves crucial to remaining
in the competition—it also reveals the ways in which Sakai’s notion of
the most advanced particularity comes into play, influencing what
masquerades as an impartial space for discourse. The program
producers and the fashion industry serve as this advanced
particularity, always getting the final say in which types of racial
narratives are most easily marketed. Ultimately, Banks teaches the
women how to impersonate any conceivable aspect of femininity,
engendering images that cut across racially oriented lines.
[14] If the contestants cannot achieve this—if they
stick out, in other words, in ways that Banks fears will not sell the
clothing—they are eliminated. “I don’t want another bitchy black
girl on this show,” Banks tells one contestant, simultaneously
stereotyping her and paradoxically demanding that she step outside of
stereotype and into a universalized notion of femininity. Later,
Banks approvingly tells a white contestant that her new makeover causes
her to appear “racially ambiguous,” enabling little girls from all
ethnic backgrounds to see themselves in this contestant. In turn,
these little girls are expected to buy the clothing displayed on the
model with which they purportedly relate, actualizing their own
burgeoning sense of self through consumption. In this
sense, the program producers propagate the show’s acceptance of
diversity, even as they demand that such diversity be streamlined into
universally marketable expressions of personal narrative.
[15] The one narrative that America’s Next Top Model
contestants are not expected to revise, however, is the narrative that
constructs and employs gender to define and even safeguard the sphere
in which the contestants operate. While the program is produced
and the contest judged by straight and queer-identified men and women
of varying ethnicities, the contestants must all be read as female,
whatever their racial identity or sexual orientation. In this
sense, the subjectivities they fashion and re-fashion for themselves
must maintain one crucial facet—they are “women,” teaching other women
how to clothe their bodies and thus, fuel the fashion industry.
Such womanhood is constantly implied, from the show’s opening question,
“What is beauty to you?” to Banks’ tireless demand for the women to
“fiercely” embrace their femininity. While Banks encourages girls like
Fatima to overcome long histories of gender-based abuse, she ultimately
expects that Fatima create a new femininity that will in turn set a
standard for potential female consumers. Banks expects the same
of Marvita, who must overcome her inability to be close to others in
order to take believable pictures. Since Marvita’s unemotional
exterior is a direct result of her sexual abuse, Banks encourages
Marvita to face this past and overcome it, restoring a sense of
sentimentality that will show on film. At the very least, Banks
demands the appearance of feminine conventionality from her contestants.
[16] In this sense, the sphere of contestation
simulated by this program actually serves as what Lauren Berlant calls
an “intimate public,” rather than a counter-public or all-inclusive
primary public sphere. Such publics “fuse feminine
rage and feminist rage… hailing the wounded to testify, to judge, to
yearn, and to think beyond the norms of sexual difference, a little”
(Berlant 1). The contestants on America’s Next Top Model
are not always angels in the reality show house, they are not all white
or middle class, and they do not always sexually desire men. Yet,
they do all “love the conventionality” of their gender, and as Berlant
puts it, they see such conventionality as a way of negotiating
belonging, rather than as a constraint (3). They see such
conventionality as a shared home. Such a portrayal of womanhood
in turn implies a similar sense of belonging for the female viewers
rooting for Marvita and Fatima, who internalize the rhetoric of
transformation. The very notion of transformation, of
transforming yet still embodying femininity, suggests the pleasure of
such belonging while paradoxically suggesting the freedom to operate
outside the boundaries of the outdated and constrictive norms of
femininity—“a little.”
[17] The inherent “littleness” of this margin of
freedom becomes evident in cycle eleven, when a new contestant reveals
to the other women that she is, in fact, a pre-op transgender.
“Personally, I prefer ‘born in the wrong body,’” Isis explains to the
camera and her implied viewers, “meaning I was born physically male…
but everything else about me was female.” Isis also finds herself
explaining her situation to the judges, as well as the other
contestants. Almost every time the camera is pointed her way, in
fact, Isis must rearticulate her story, the familiar ‘born in the wrong
body’ narrative, as if in awareness of the slipperiness of the
narratives that both free her and constrain her. “It’s not
something I chose,” Isis says. “It’s just who I always been
[sic].” Such an assertion appeases the curiosity of some of the
contestants and thrills Banks, who asserts that she first noticed Isis
posing in the background of the transient-themed photo shoots of cycle
ten. “This girl [was] absolutely amazing,” Banks says,
pointing to an emotionally-charged photo of Isis hovering behind the
cycle ten contestant. Because of this photo, Banks explains that
she called Isis to audition for cycle eleven, fully accepting Isis’
drive to belong, not only to the fashion industry, but to “women’s
culture” in general.
[18] Isis’s desire to belong, to find a home in the
conventionality of the term “woman,” haunts this season as her image
haunts the contestants’ image in the photo from cycle ten. Yet,
not everyone accepts her. One contestant named Kacey asks Isis,
“Ain’t this supposed to be a girl competition? How did you get
through the door?” Another contestant tells the camera: “If I
have to get along with Isis I will, but then again, if it comes between
me and my goal… I’ll stomp that man right outta’ the
competition.” This same contestant, incidentally sporting the
name of Clark, confides in contestant Hannah that she is afraid of
getting into the swimming pool with Isis. She justifies her view
by claiming that she is not close-minded—she is simply
traditional. “You walk around like that in a small town, you’ll
get shot,” Clark says, criminalizing Isis’s perceived homelessness, her
inability to fully conform to the conventionality of gender. The
problem Clark seems to have with Isis is that her transgression is more
than a “little” one. Clark grins at her own boyish name and
easily kisses another girl in the hot tub, playing into the program’s
theme of liberated and transformed femininity. Yet, she cannot
allow someone whose body does not reflect her own to have a home in the
intimate public she shares with others who identify with the term
“woman.” Since Isis does not start out a “woman,” in the view of
many of the contestants, since she must transform her body as well as
her subjectivity, she is not finally resignifying femininity, but is
instead masquerading as female.
[19] Despite the contestants’ suspicions, the America’s Next Top Model
judges assert that a model has to be “many different things to many
people,” implying that a model must become a master-storyteller, able
to obscure any perceived origin in order to embody an image that will
then provide the viewer with a large selection of consumerist options
from which to choose. This assertion echoes Wolfgang Fritz Haug’s
theory of the aesthetic innovation which regenerates demand, convincing
the consumer that the newest commodity is the most essential (Haug
43-4). In this sense, the judges search for contestants who can
successfully change their own image into the “newest thing,” aligning
that image with the clothing that will then entice the consumer. As
Guy Redden explains, this drive for reality television contestants to
fashion and refashion themselves is consistent with contemporary social
theory: “that of the individualization brought about by the
fragmentation of institutions and the pluralizations of knowledges”
(157). Redden traces the theory that “being right” no longer
equates with following custom, but rather with choosing the “right”
commodities from a wide selection (Bauman, qtd. in Redden 157).
According to Redden, reality TV cast members draw on different readings
of uniqueness in order to serve as “typifications of individuality” not
necessarily dependent upon stabilized notions of culture (156).
In makeover television, all participants are ultimately propelled from
their unique origins toward moral consumerism, where the morality
relies on the individual’s ability to make good consumerist choices
based on a plethora of options (156). America’s Next Top Model
propels its contestants in the same way, first demanding that the
contestants become good consumer-citizens and then expecting them to
properly model such consumerism in order to encourage it in the
program’s viewers. By exploring this aspect of the program, I
will reveal the ways in which the empowering narratives of female
mobility align with the perceived mobility of currency itself,
positioning these contestants and the female viewers who internalize
their messages as consumers and commodities paradoxically connected to
both the western concept of home and the western fear of homelessness.
Aesthetic Innovation and Refashioning the Self
[20] The title of this program, America’s Next Top Model,
points to its consumerist focus even without the assistance of the
blatant product placement designed to look like “gifts” that the
contestants must then properly enjoy. In cycle
ten, for instance, the contestants hear a knock on the door of their
loft and run into the foyer to find an array of high-end handbags and
Apple Bottom jeans. Some of the contestants immediately begin to
change into their new clothes. Others conspicuously carry their
handbags everywhere they travel for the rest of the season. Yet,
some of the contestants fail to make use of these gifts, as well as the
fashion advice they receive while on the show. When Kim, of cycle
ten, approaches the judges’ panel wearing a headband with a large
ribbon, the judges laugh and poke fun at her. They then demand
that she take the headband off. “Ooooh girl, this outfit,” Tyra
clucks disapprovingly. The mild disapproval of the judges and the
other contestants turns into scorn, though, when Kim announces that she
is no longer interested in modeling such expensive clothing, as she
personally finds it ridiculous to pay $2000 for a single outfit.
““Kim wants to model because it’s pretty and blah-blah-blah,” derides
Fatima. “Maybe this is not the right place for her.” Since she
fails to align her individuality with the principles of proper
consumption, Kim quickly leaves the program.
[21] Isis also experiences this crash course in proper
consumerism. When she approaches the judges’ panel in
poorly-matched clothing, her hair in disarray, the judges tell her she
looks “common.” They then inform Isis that when she faces them at
panel each week, she must look like a model; yet, what Banks and the
other judges imply in this scene is that Isis must look like a female
model. Her hair must appear soft and controlled, and her clothing
must accentuate her figure, enabling her to serve as the object of the
desiring male gaze, as well as the studious female gaze. No
mention is made of Isis’s biological structure at this panel session;
instead, she is fully accepted as someone who has eschewed her
perceived origin and who is now writing a new story that must align
with the model narrative propagated by this television program.
In this sense, Isis’s personal narrative engenders the model narrative
that anyone and everyone can write their own story—with a little help
from certain clothing lines.
[22] From this angle, then, America’s Next Top Model seems
to mirror Canclini’s global “model of society in which many state
functions have disappeared or been assumed by private corporations, and
in which social participation is organized through consumption rather
than through the exercise of citizenship” (5). Unlike Benhabib,
Canclini explores the interaction between consumption and citizenship
rather than simply exploring the global interdependence of cultures in
the face of global change. He states that now, citizenship is
based on “the private consumption of commodities and media offerings
rather than abstract rules of democracy" (5). Viewing consumption
through this lens, Canclini cites the disappearance of stable concepts
like “culture” and “nation,” arguing that we instead inhabit an era of
fragmentation and hybridity, where identity groups are formed according
to codes other than those of ethnic or cultural origin (43). Now
those codes serve as “mobile pacts for the interpretation of
commodities and messages,” enabling the formation of international
communities founded on patterns of consumption (43-4).
[23] The contestants of America’s Next Top Model
at first seem to represent just this sort of “international” community,
founded on the shared consumption of haute couture (or strategic
knockoffs), as well as on the shared consumption of female empowerment
slogans such as “Dare to be fierce,” and “What is beauty to you?”
Gender plays a crucial role in the formation of such communities,
especially when the commodities in question contribute to the
construction of a purportedly “international” version of
femininity. In order for this community to truly seem
international, the producers of this American program employ racial
narrative even as the English language and the white standard of
“racial ambiguity” underscores this community’s notion of womanhood.
Meanwhile, America’s Next Top Model has engendered several
counterparts in varying countries, some of which fuse the “fierce”
femininity and the “racial ambiguity” of the American program with
televisual techniques more specific to each particular region in which
this programming appears. For example, the opening of China’s Next Top Model, Brazil’s Next Top Model, and Russia’s Next Top Model (also referred to as You are a Supermodel)
all feature the same aggressive music with sexualized shots of each
contestant gazing fiercely into the camera, propagating the western
fashion industry’s version of femininity as the globally accepted
version, from Shanghai to Moscow.
[24] While America’s Next Top Model certainly
illuminates the ways in which cultural identity is now often founded on
consumption rather than on the concept of nation, this program reduces
culture to the mise-en-scène which Canclini attempts to dismantle (84), transforming
what he views as a montage of multiple viewpoints into a coherent whole
that serves a distinct purpose. In this sense, American television
programming is certainly not contributing to the new perspective that
Canclini propagates, despite the fact that it is overflowing national
boundaries and influencing other programming traditions, even as
European and Latin American entertainment television overflows U.S.
boundaries and sometimes influences the content and style of programs
at “home.” Thus, the consumption-driven fluidity of which
Canclini speaks does not necessarily lead to the fragmentation of
universalized narratives, but instead may only lead to reductive
revisions of these narratives that are employed by the most advanced
particularity existing within various cultural groups. In other
words, American television takes culture and pieces what Canclini terms
the “effervescent montage of discontinuous images,” into a quite
continuous image, a recognizable home.
[25] America’s Next Top Model at first seems to
create this image of home through its rather nationalist tendency to
flood each episode with establishing shots of the U.S. city in which
the contest is taking place. In cycle ten, the contestants live
in Manhattan, and each week their dramatic conflicts occur only after
an establishing shot of Manhattan flashes onto the screen. These
shots show a financial Manhattan: Times Square, Rockefeller Plaza, and
the Empire State Building, reinforcing one distinct map of New York—the
“all-American” map of a booming business center integral to the
progress of the global north. The model narrative of
individualization in this program, then, is interwoven with a limiting
visual rhetoric, suggesting the important influence of the global north
and its corporations on this notion of consumer-citizenship.
Raewyn Connell asserts that social theory “sees and speaks” from the
global north, employing globalization to “name-the-world-as-a-whole” as
its object of knowledge (368). This tendency likely stems from
the same impulse that prompts America’s Next Top Model
producers to similarly objectify this world-as-a-whole as the
proverbial home that belongs to everyone and to which everyone belongs
in the moment of no longer belonging. Thus, what Morley calls
“our supposedly deterritorialized culture of homelessness” becomes a
rhetorical tool, veiling its own use of the same monolithic logic that
underpins the notion of belonging, the notion of home, and the notion
of proper consumption that occurs within that space.
[26] This “culture of homelessness” is reflected alongside monolithic notions of home in cycle ten of America’s Next Top Model,
when the contestants pose as homeless people on the streets of
Manhattan. Within the space of a North American metropolis, the
contestants enact the moment of belonging through no longer belonging;
they pose as people with no stabilized identity. Yet, they are
all recognizably female, posing on a freshly constructed set rather
than in an alley and mimicking a photo of Tyra Banks dressed as a
transient, holding a sign that reads: “Will pose for change.”
This image again invokes the dangerous fluidity of the feminine and the
financial, while simultaneously attempting to contain that fluidity by
assigning it a specific narrative within the simulated space for
discourse that appears on the television screen; the money itself
remains hidden, the alley remains suspiciously clean, and the
contestants themselves are carefully contained within the space of the
photographic and televisual frames. As Morley suggests, the
notion of cleanliness often coincides with notions of secured
boundaries, or national homogeneity (141). This process operates
at the familial and societal level, implying that “the family may of
course be mobile as it moves through this threatening, external world,
but its boundaries must remain secure” (Morley 141).
[27] While the notion of gender, like the notion of
culture and nationhood, is represented in this program as an entity in
flux, the word “woman” still remains intact. The contestants and
the members of the consumption-based community this program creates are
expected to hold to the notion of womanhood in order to remain part of
this community. Thus, while the word “woman” shifts and morphs
and appears to cross boundaries, to defy notions of home, it actually
serves as a home on the move, in the same way a “nation” without
geographic borders may continue to police its philosophical and
political borders, even as it travels throughout and attempts to
infiltrate the world. In this sense, gender and nation work
together to dictate the structures of Canclini’s international
communities, generating consumer-citizens who pursue their own
fashioning and their new sense of belonging in true neoliberal
spirit. It is this neoliberal agenda that Toby Miller argues
contributes to the real fashioning of citizens, as a reaction to what
he calls the “crisis of belonging” that occurs due to the
disintegration of nations and cultures in the face of globalization
(1). Through Miller’s lens, I will explain how neoliberalism
constructs notions of home around an “inside/outside” binary. I
will then show that, especially through the technology of television,
neoliberalism solidifies this same inside/outside binary in relation to
gender, as it simultaneously facilitates the mobilization of gender as
commodity.
Inside and Outside
[28] While the rhetoric of homelessness permeates the
globalized world, real homelessness, or “not-belonging,” often results
in legal action against the material bodies that represent this problem
(Morley 26). Since citizenship has traditionally relied not
solely on the notion of rootedness, but also on the notion of property
ownership, the transients who cannot even give a mailing address to
prospective employers are constantly relocated and thus, made invisible
(Hebdige, qtd. in Morley 26). In the same way, those identities
not traditionally thought to belong in certain nations experience a
similar, though rhetorical relocation. The “crisis of belonging” is
realigned alongside the problematic discourse of multiculturalism, or a
self-contradictory model of individualization on a reality television
show. This underscores David Garland’s assertion that the Western media
tend to reduce the mobilizing effects of moral panic. In other words,
while some moral panics can cause “the deviance in question” to be
“amplified or altogether transformed,” the inner workings of the media
that exacerbate such panics tend to inhibit positive transformation
(Garland 7, 10). Thus, even as programs like America’s Next Top Model
propagate narratives of increased mobility, they actually decrease the
mobility of the truly transformative discourses that moral panic could
productively produce, obscuring the reality of difference behind a
universalizing rhetoric of collectively “not-belonging” that still
implies the importance of belonging to a particular identity group.
[29] This contradiction is not unique to reality
television, but also appears in the American news media’s commentary on
the “crisis of belonging.” Miller’s work explores the ways in
which this crisis “is both registered and held in check” in U.S. news
programming (1). Echoing the news media’s famous mantra, Miller
claims that the crisis of belonging is a crisis of “who, what, when,
and where,” and he cites the drive to belong, as well as the sense of
not belonging, as a product of the appropriation of culture by a
neoliberal project that eclipses the power of the traditional
“American” state (2). Like Canclini, Miller situates the
formation of identity around consumption, arguing that “with consumers
targeted by a culture-driven economy, their identities come to be
points of sociopolitical and commercial organization” (9). In
other words, the notions that have always been closely connected with
the concept of universalized identity origin, or “home”—access to food
and protection from “outsiders”—all become commodities manipulated by
the mass media, pointing again to the ways in which the concept of home
generates a site for identity construction and the consumption so
important to that construction.
[30] Miller first delineates the ways in which
television manipulates notions of “inside” and “outside,” “secure,” and
“endangered” in the United States. He outlines how, during and
directly after the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center,
the U.S. news media “set a premium on the lives of Manhattan
residents,” indicating their “inside” status while simultaneously
labeling certain groups both within and outside the U.S. as terrorists
(107). He recounts how journalists during this time were
instructed to be “patriots first, and journalists second,” revealing
another important trait of belonging—loyalty to the community to which
one belongs (99). Morley states that in order to possess a
home—“the natural place of shelter where we can lock the doors against
misfortune and unwanted outsiders”—one must often adhere to a rigid set
of requirements decided upon by all who occupy the home space
(18). In the case of September 11th, journalists not only
adhered—they helped create the requirements. Morley explains how
U.S. and European broadcasting has always created a national sense of
unity by bringing events from which many viewers would be excluded into
their homes and thus giving them the illusion of inclusion (107).
During and directly after September 11th, this occurred in the negative
sense, bringing carefully chosen images of infiltration into American
homes. These images were coupled with patriotic symbols, such as
flags and soldiers—contributing to and drawing upon what Berlant calls
the national symbolic, or the “alphabet for collective consciousness or
national subjectivity” (qtd. in Morley 107). In this sense,
journalists tried to create a homogenous notion of home that
necessarily posited certain types of difference as dangerous.
This sense of danger led to the intentional transgression of regional
and legal boundaries by U.S. authorities—hence, the attacks on
Afghanistan and Iraq and the imprisonments in Guantánamo Bay (Miller
92).
[31] While journalism works with precision to create
these notions of inside and outside, entertainment television
constructs its own “inside/outside” binaries in just as insidious a
fashion. Laurie Ouellette posits this as an issue of
governmentality, tracing James Hay’s argument that television
facilitates the internalization of self-governance, since the
neoliberal agenda depends on government deregulation in order to
transgress national boundaries and institute current corporate
practices; incidentally, neoliberal rhetoric also seeks to avoid
government involvement in the life of the individual who must make
herself over into the ideal consumer-citizen (Ouellette 226).
Ouellette adds that a long tradition of feminist discourse locates this
self-governance in the makeover tradition so ubiquitous to western
reality television programming (226).
[32] I would like to conceptualize how, through the
technology of the makeover, American entertainment television connects
such governance with the inside/outside binary, positioning the
“inside” status as a destination to which all women must dutifully
attempt to arrive, even as that “inside” status overflows national
boundaries and materializes at multiple sites. America’s Next Top Model
particularly points to the ways in which such refashioning is
structured around complex notions of inside and outside that are
explicitly tied to gender. Isis serves as both outsider and
insider in the same episode, depending on which cast member is speaking
at the time. Both Banks’s approval of Isis and the contestants’
disapproval work in the same way. Isis’s constantly shifting status
helps solidify the category, the stable home that each contestant finds
in gender. In this sense, Isis recognizes herself as outsider,
trying to get inside, and achieving this journey inside through a
successful embodiment of the mobile image of femininity.
[33] The proper maintenance of this image of femininity
depends on another trait coiled within the concept of home: access to
food. Miller explains how food is the basis of the earliest class
systems, symbolizing consumption and signifying one’s particular
caliber of home within the national home (112). The American
interest in food has led to what Miller calls “Food TV… a key site of
risk and moral panic, a space that forms and maintains citizens” (121).
This formation of citizenship manifests itself in “mobilized rhetoric
of neoliberal self-governance,” which blames obesity on poor consumer
choices rather than on poor food regulation (Downey et al., qtd. in
Miller 122). On America’s Next Top Model, proper
consumption of food products leads to proper formation of woman as
commodity. Because of this, the show’s judges and contestants often
address each others’ eating habits. In cycle four, for instance,
the judges constantly attack the contestant Keenyah for her purported
weight gain. Accordingly, the cameras follow the woman around the
contestants’ apartment, capturing close-ups of everything she
eats. Yet, cycles nine and ten each champion their token
“plus-sized model,” asserting the beauty of womanly curves, and
carefully capturing those same close-up shots of potato pancakes and
peanut butter bars. When one of the plus-sized models begins to
lose weight, she is eliminated from the contest as abruptly as the
standard model that the judges chastise for gaining weight. In
both instances, the contestants are punished for failing to serve as a
model of proper self-governance. Through this visual rhetoric,
woman is again invoked as the powerful, yet capricious entity, a
commodity for exchange that is expected to know and enhance her own
commodity value.
[34] This phenomenon serves as a prime example of
Miller’s assertion that subjectivities are manipulated and identities
produced through the neoliberal project that utilizes moral panic and
the identity crises informing such panic in order to achieve its
goal. America’s Next Top Model draws on the rhetoric of
self-governance in a way that at first seems to suggest autonomy in the
fashioning of personal narrative. Yet, at the end of every
episode, this autonomy is replaced with explicit instructions for
self-transformation, courtesy of Tyra Banks and her lackeys.
While the instructions differ from contestant to contestant, implying
the “plethora of options” which Guy Redden attributes to globalization,
the contestants are still expected to make the correct choices in order
to achieve the sanctioned sort of success, predicated on their
adherence to gender rules. The women are expected to find and
employ “consumer options that satisfy and personalize differentiated
notions of value” (Redden 151). However, they are also expected
to make the choices that will transform them into role-models for the
millions of female viewers eyeing both the bodies and the clothing from
the home-space of their sofas. Camouflaged as entertainment, America’s Next Top Model
employs the theme of homelessness to read the mobility that defies
social constructs like “nation” and “culture,” while simultaneously
masking the immobility of gender. Gender, in all its shifting
shapes, paradoxically becomes a site for belonging and
no-longer-belonging, an articulation of homelessness, and the last home
standing.
Acknowledgements: I thank my seminar members at
the 2008 Futures of American Studies Institute, as well as my anonymous
readers, for their thoughtful feedback on this project. I also
thank Toby Miller for his useful insights on this paper in its various
stages.
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Contributor’s Note:
LINDSAY PALMER is a Ph.D. candidate at
the University of California, Riverside, where she specializes in
feminist discourse, television studies, and postmodern American
literature. She is currently working on a project that explores
the connection between the confessional voice in Cold War American
poetry and the confessional interview typical of reality
television.
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