Available Formats
The Evil Twins of American Television: Feminist Alter Egos since 1960
By (Author) Kristi Rowan Humphreys
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
9th March 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Television
Gender studies: women and girls
791.45653
Paperback
138
Width 154mm, Height 230mm, Spine 9mm
231g
The Evil Twins of American Television examines evil-twin depictions in over fifty years of television, comparing male twins to female twins and male-writer depictions to female-writer depictions. Kristi Rowan Humphreys evaluates The Patty Duke Show, Bewitched, Gilligans Island, I Dream of Jeannie, and The Brady Bunch, among other television programs that use the twinning trope to explore themes of feminism and identity. Employing traits identified by Betty Friedan in The Feminine Mystique as belonging to the evil side of her schizophrenic split theory, Humphreys analyzes the ways in which these alter ego characters embody the desire for a separate self and independence through loose inhibitions, career interests, political interests, intellectual prowess, and assertiveness. This book then compares female-written twin episodes to male-written twin episodes, finding that when evil twin episodes are written by women writers, the twins are presented less as oppositional binaries and more as compatible, often symbiotic binaries. Thus, the women writers of these shows offer a compelling response to Friedans text, one that acknowledges and underscores the many complexities of womenthe image of which cannot in reality be so easily split into two oppositional binaries. Humphreys then connects 1960s depictions to more current evil-twin examples, including those in Friends, Knight Rider, and Sabrina the Teenage Witch.
In writing about the use of the twin trope in television plots of the 1960s, Humphreys (Baylor Univ.) illustrates how these series portrayed gender roles of the period against the background of new feminist identity influenced by Betty Friedans The Feminine Mystique (1963). Humphreys contrasts portrayals of twin characters by analyzing specific scripts from 1960s seriesThe Patty Duke Show, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, Gilligans Island, The Brady Bunch, and Doctor Whoand she also brings more recent series into the discussion (e.g., Friends, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, and Knight Rider). The author details the similarities of portrayals in which one twin was good, happy, and content and the other bad or evil, often with the same actor playing both twins. The final chapter discusses the sex of the various scriptwriters of these series, pointing out that twin characters in the few scripts written by women were more complex than those in scripts written by men.
Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.
Kristi Rowan Humphreys is lecturer in the Department of English at Baylor University.