Female Hackers

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Girl Friday Power Chloe Sullivan and the Hacker Sidekicks of Twenty-First Century Teen Television T ARA K. P ARMITER “Sometimes heroes can’t do it all on their own, Chloe—that’s why they need sidekicks.”—Lois Lane, “Metallo” (2009) “Ladies, get out your boxing gloves and bustiers,” Jennifer Steinhauer proclaims in “Pow! Slam! Thank You, Ma’am,” a New York Times piece on the proliferation of tough female action stars in the popular media of the early twenty-first century. 1 With Buffy, Xena, and Dark Angel, among others, “slap- ping, immolating and kickboxing their way through life,” Steinhauer sees women and girls charging into a “formerly male-dominated arena: sheer phys- ical prowess.” Since the turn of the century, these new heroines have rallied under the banner of girl power and deftly stomped on old stereotypes that rel- egated women to romantic interests and damsels-in-distress. As Sherrie Inness notes in Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture, not only have “these tough women heroes” taken on heroic roles formerly reserved for men, but they “do not require men to help them, a shift that removes women from their stereotypical role as men’s helpers.” 2 These superwomen embrace their roles as leaders in a brave new world, refusing to be the second sex any longer. Whereas the “action chick” rules with brute force, the “hacker diva” rules with her intellect, her high-tech gadgets, and her incredibly fast typing skills. Perhaps as prominent a pop cultural phenomenon as the physically empowered heroines, female hackers of the turn-of-the-twenty-first century run the gamut from the sexy Acid Burn of Hackers (1995) and Trinity of The Matrix (1999), 100

Transcript of Female Hackers

  • Girl Friday PowerChloe Sullivan and the Hacker Sidekicks of

    Twenty- First Century Teen Television

    TARA K. PARMITER

    Sometimes heroes cant do it all on their own, Chloethats why theyneed sidekicks.Lois Lane, Metallo (2009)

    Ladies, get out your boxing gloves and bustiers, Jennifer Steinhauerproclaims in Pow! Slam! Thank You, Maam, a New York Times piece on theproliferation of tough female action stars in the popular media of the early twenty- rst century.1 With Buffy, Xena, and Dark Angel, among others, slap-ping, immolating and kickboxing their way through life, Steinhauer seeswomen and girls charging into a formerly male- dominated arena: sheer phys-ical prowess. Since the turn of the century, these new heroines have ralliedunder the banner of girl power and deftly stomped on old stereotypes that rel-egated women to romantic interests and damsels- in-distress. As Sherrie Innessnotes in Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture, notonly have these tough women heroes taken on heroic roles formerly reservedfor men, but they do not require men to help them, a shift that removes womenfrom their stereotypical role as mens helpers.2 These superwomen embracetheir roles as leaders in a brave new world, refusing to be the second sex anylonger.

    Whereas the action chick rules with brute force, the hacker diva ruleswith her intellect, her high- tech gadgets, and her incredibly fast typing skills.Perhaps as prominent a pop cultural phenomenon as the physically empoweredheroines, female hackers of the turn- of-the-twenty-rst century run the gamutfrom the sexy Acid Burn of Hackers (1995) and Trinity of The Matrix (1999),

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