SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF REQUIREMENTS FOR ...

[Pages:186]APPROVAL PAGE FOR GRADUATE THESIS OR PROJECT

SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF REQUIREMENTS FOR DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS AT CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LOS ANGELES BY

Stephanie Abraham Candidate

Interdisciplinary Studies: Cultural Studies Field of Concentration

TITLE: HOLLYWOOD'S HAREM HOUSEWIFE: ORIENTALISM IN I DREAM OF JEANNIE

APPROVED: Dr. Steven Classen Faculty Member Dr. Dionne Espinoza Faculty Member Dr. John Ramirez Faculty Member Dr. Alan Muchlinski Department Chairperson

DATE: 06/07/06

Signature Signature Signature Signature

HOLLYWOOD'S HAREM HOUSEWIFE: ORIENTALISM IN I DREAM OF JEANNIE

A Thesis Presented to The Faculties of the Departments of Chicana/o Studies, Communication Studies, and Sociology California State University, Los Angeles

In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree

Master of Arts

By Stephanie Abraham

June 2006

? 2006 Stephanie Abraham ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This project would not have been possible without the love, support, and patience of so many people in my academic and personal communities, who figured out how to support me even when overwhelmed by their own responsibilities. My expectations of graduate school have been surpassed at California State University, Los Angeles. I have encountered mentors who have greatly impacted my life. I have had the great fortune of spending hours talking and laughing with my thesis advisor, Dr. Steven Classen. He listens and advises and is not afraid to let out his inner-cheerleader to encourage his overworked and underpaid graduate students. He is an excellent professor and mentor. I am also significantly indebted to Dr. Dionne Espinoza, who lets it slide that I call her "dude," and consistently challenges me to take my scholarship, my dreams, and myself seriously. As a Sally Casanova Pre-Doctoral Scholar I was fortunate to have her as my mentor. She has celebrated my successes and has reminded me who I am when I have been too overwhelmed to remember. Her example as a woman of color teaching and as a researcher in the academy has greatly inspired me, and I hope I can follow in her footsteps. Additionally, Drs. John Ramirez, Suzanne Regan, and Ricky Rodr?guez have significantly affected my experience, as has Dr. Milton Brown. Their positive outlooks, words of encouragement, and intellectual debates have made me not only a better scholar but also a stronger person. I will carry their examples into the classroom as well.

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Jennifer Ashley's incredible competence and brutal honesty has been an immeasurable contribution to this work. Time after time she pulled me out of the plotsummary conundrum and challenged me to get to the point. The world would be a much better place to read and write in if everyone had a copy editor like Jen.

Jessica Hoffmann did not have much input on this specific project; however, her influence and editorial voice always sound in my head. Working as a writer and editor with her has strengthened my editorial abilities immensely. Our frequent musings about the ups-and-downs of the writing process have broken my isolation, roused me to get up everyday and to go back to the keyboard, and to keep trying.

I learned a great deal from starting LOUDmouth, Cal State L.A.'s feminist magazine, with Daria Teruko Yudacufski. We spent many afternoons talking about, among other things, the politics of representation. Daria has been my mentor, my colleague, and my friend. Without realizing it, we were setting the stage for many more beautiful projects to come ? this thesis is one of them.

Many Arab American scholars have backed me in this endeavor. In particular, the warmth and encouragement of Evelyn Alsultany and Amira Jarmakani have been priceless. Dr. Jack Shaheen has been incredibly supportive. I am happy that they are in the world ? their work gives me hope. Also, my colleagues at Cal State L.A. have kept me going. Deborah Hanan has cheered me on and offered me an example of what ethical scholarship looks like. Medalit Tay, aside from being a thought-provoking classmate, has

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been a wonderful friend. I am not sure I would have gotten through this last year without our late-night discussions and debriefings.

Mar?a Murillo, Shannon Arvizu, and Erika Coronado, my "Chicana trinity," deserve special recognition. Mar?a has seen me through storms and clear skies; she is an example of a "real woman" in the best sense ? honest, courageous, searching. Shannon lives 3,000 miles away yet her excitement and desire to live runs through me in spite of the distance between us. Erika has never seen an episode of I Dream of Jeannie but knows more about the series than most people, a testament to her willingness to engage intellectually and emotionally at any hour of any day, and to take the struggle at hand seriously. The presence of these three mujeres is all over this manuscript.

Thomas Hern?ndez never seizes to amaze me. He knows when to hold 'em, when to fold 'em, when to walk away, and when to lead me onto the dance floor. In many ways, his patience, kindness, and great sense of humor have made this project possible. Suffice it to say, I am ecstatic to share my life with him.

Finally, I would like to appreciate my nuclear family, my greatest source of joy. Without my brother Peter I may have starved to death in front of my computer screen. He monitored my blood sugar, filled my belly, and calmed me down during the occasional over-the-top panic attack (like when my computer erased the better half of Chapter One). My father and mother, Don and Sarah, by example, remind me that life is to be laughed at

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and that accomplishments do not make me more loveable. It is not a secret how proud I am to have them as my parents or how thankful I feel to be their daughter.

Naomi Shihab Nye has written that if grandmothers and children ruled the world there would be no wars. Her book Sitti's Secrets made me a believer. Although, I am not one to romanticize grandmothers, women, or youngsters as inherently pacifistic, while engaged in this project, I found myself returning to Nye's words time and again. I contemplate what life was like for my grandmothers and how it is and might be for the children of tomorrow. While I am not sure wars would end if they controlled the globe, I agree that their power and creativity are beyond measure and too-often overlooked. It is in the honor of grandmothers and children that I contribute this work.

Although grandfathers are precious in their own right, I often think of my grandmothers, all of whom have already passed, and am greatly motivated by the hope that my work follows their legacy. My Scotch Irish great-grandmother modeled the importance of sitting down together to share in conversation and laughter. Her daughter, my grandmother, was the one responsible for making the macaroni and cheese that filled my childhood with warmth and deliciousness. Being close to them in my childhood deeply affected me. It was not until years later, after I took up writing and activism, that I learned that they too had written and taken part in social-justice movements. Then I realized that I was following in their footsteps.

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Although I never knew my Arab great-grandmothers, their decisions to leave Lebanon and Syria and sail to the "New World" greatly affected me. I often wonder what it was like for them to go through Ellis Island as young women, to raise children so far from home. I wish I could have spent time in their kitchens, listening to the Arabic flow off of their tongues, taking in the scents of garlic and thyme and soaking up the secret recipes for lentils and grape leaves. I would have liked to have known their daughters, my grandmothers, as well. It is my hope that if they were alive today that they would recognize in me the same determination, courage, and love that guided their lives.

The youngsters who surround me consistently move me. The ones I have taught have challenged me to be patient and present in today. The offspring of friends and family, especially my little cousins, remind me of the importance of play and hugs. All of them make me smile. I am inspired by the desire to create a safe space for these children and for those who have not yet arrived at our doorsteps. It is to grandparents and babes that I dedicate this work.

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