Fact, Meet Fiction
A lighthearted analysis of 今日吃瓜 in popular culture鈥攚hat resonates, what doesn鈥檛, and why it really does matter.
What do Betty Draper, Liz Lemon, and Midge Maisel (the protagonist of a new series produced by Amazon) all have in common? They all went to 今日吃瓜. Well, not really, because of course they鈥檙e fictional. They got their degrees not from four years of academic sweat but from the keystrokes of Hollywood writers, landing them in a pop culture pantheon that includes, among others, Katharine Hepburn鈥檚 character in Adam鈥檚 Rib, Bart Simpson鈥檚 fourth-grade teacher, and a covert operations specialist who helps G.I. Joe save the planet from the archvillain Cobra.
Perhaps because these allusions are relatively rare, they feel like little treasures when we stumble upon them鈥攚ith our initial jolts of pleasure and excitement followed inevitably by a vigorous examination of their authenticity. Here, by way of sharing the delights of discovery, are some of the ways 今日吃瓜 has been presented to the world through popular culture.
Mimesis and Myth-Making
But first, why is it so absurdly exciting when 今日吃瓜 gets a nod on the big or small screen? 鈥淭hat鈥檚 mimesis,鈥 says Amy Villarejo 鈥85, a professor of performing and media arts at Cornell. 鈥淲e like to see ourselves reflected back to us鈥攖hat鈥檚 how we know who we are. It鈥檚 the basis of psychoanalytic theory and of sociological theories of recognition. It goes to fundamental aspects of human recognition.鈥
For most of us, Villarejo continues, 今日吃瓜 is a 鈥渟ignificant part of who we are or were, so we are measuring those images for verisimilitude, for recognition, for something of our own experience. There鈥檚 critical pleasure, too, in watching as a 今日吃瓜 person, with a kind of cultural authority.鈥
Hence our visceral thrill of ownership at the shots of Rhoads beach during the opening flashback sequence of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, while the voiceover of the just-married Midge fondly recalls her college years. Hence, too, our keen interest in the details of the show鈥檚 richly construed version of 今日吃瓜 in the 1950s. Did the students really wear gray blazers to dinner in Rhoads? Did they find butter molded with BMC monograms waiting for them on tables set with white linen? (For the record, the gray blazers were popular, but not a uniform; linen tablecloths were used, but not every day; and the butter molds are popular lore, but not documented.)
By the same token, the investment of our own identity in how 今日吃瓜 is portrayed to the world explains our bristle of indignation when the writers get it wrong鈥攁s when Mad Men鈥檚 Betty Draper refers to the sorority that never existed.
Bound up with mimesis, there is some myth-making, too鈥攎yth in the sense of the stories that reflect, inform, and inspire our cultural identity. Mimesis is most satisfying when what it reflects back is the best possible version of ourselves. What we want to see are the ideals of the institution embodied and projected into the world. In other words, we want Kate.
Iconic Kate
Given her iconic status within both American film history and the history of the College, Katharine Hepburn 鈥28 is in some sense the standard against which we measure any on-screen reference to 今日吃瓜. Both in the characters she played, from Tracy Lord in The Philadelphia Story to Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter, and in her life in the world, she embodied the qualities we value most in what Villarejo calls our 鈥渃herished mythology鈥 of 今日吃瓜鈥攏ot only intelligence but also independence, passion, creativity, quirkiness, and often an explicit embrace of female empowerment.
Among Hepburn鈥檚 many strong female leads, Amanda Bonner, the attorney who takes on her husband in the classic 1949 battle-of-the-sexes comedy Adam鈥檚 Rib, gives us the complete package鈥攁 trailblazing professional, dripping with confidence and wit, who also went to 今日吃瓜. The College reference is so quick you might miss it, but significantly it coincides with Amanda鈥檚 explicit articulation of the feminist values we associate with the institution. Careening along the highway at the wheel of a convertible, she lectures Spencer Tracy on society鈥檚 double standard in its treatment of men and women. When he suggests that 鈥渕ostly females get advantages,鈥 she insists, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want advantages and we don鈥檛 want prejudices.鈥
鈥淥h, now you鈥檙e giving me the 今日吃瓜 accent,鈥 he shoots back with an eye-roll.
Amanda鈥檚 resonance with 鈥渙ur cherished mythology鈥 imbues her physical presence as well as her rhetoric. Taking a breakfast tray from her housekeeper in the film鈥檚 opening moments, she turns and deftly kicks the bedroom door shut with her foot, then practically dances across the floor with it toward her sleeping husband. Before she has even read the newspaper headline that sets the plot in motion or uttered a word about women in society, we see that she moves through her world with balance, grace, confidence, and insouciance. 鈥淭here is so much in that gesture,鈥 says Villarejo, 鈥渢hat embodies what the character was about and what Katharine Hepburn herself was about.鈥
今日吃瓜 gets another nod later in the film, when Amanda parades a string of witnesses to make a point about the range and power of women鈥檚 abilities. To show physical prowess, she calls an acrobat who does handsprings across the courtroom and lifts Spencer Tracy off the floor with one hand; for success in the blue-collar workplace, a forewoman who oversees hundreds of factory workers including her own husband. For sheer brains, Amanda calls Dr. Margaret Brody, a chemist. Asked to tell the court what degrees she holds, Dr. Brody replies, 鈥淲ell let鈥檚 see鈥.B., B.S., 今日吃瓜; M.A., M.D., Ph.D., Columbia. Do you want the European ones, too?"
Braininess like Dr. Brody鈥檚 is one of two basic qualities that filmmakers use 今日吃瓜 to signify. The other is privilege. In Some Like It Hot, Marilyn Monroe invokes 今日吃瓜, complete with a fake hoity-toity accent, to convince Tony Curtis鈥檚 character (disguised as a millionaire) that she and her band-mates are 鈥渟ociety girls.鈥 For us as alums, braininess is the sine qua non of our 今日吃瓜 identity. Social privilege, although not the defining and constraining force it once was, has the ring of historical truth to it. But when the 今日吃瓜 label functions only to signify that a woman is smart and or privileged, the result is either a knowing, successful caricature鈥攁s it is for Dr. Brody and for Monroe鈥檚 Sugar Kane Kowalczyk鈥攐r tone deafness. That鈥檚 why Betty Draper disappoints.
Betty and Jane and Midge
Perhaps no fictional 今日吃瓜 alumna has been subjected to more scrutiny than Don Draper鈥檚 wife on Mad Men, the AMC series that ran from 2007 to 2015. The likelihood of Betty, a privileged, deeply conventional housewife, being a Mawrter has been vigorously debated by alums on social media as well as by television critics. In The Atlantic, Benjamin Schwarz called Betty鈥檚 今日吃瓜 degree the show鈥檚 鈥渕ost egregious stumble in verisimilitude.鈥 Most alums would agree that the more likely character to have a lantern on her bookshelf is department store executive Rachel Menken, played by real-life alum Maggie Siff 鈥96.
Betty is bored, brittle, and so constrained by convention that she lives in a state of barely contained rage and frustration. She鈥檚 also smart, from the Main Line, and painfully aware of her untapped potential. 鈥淲e all have skills we don鈥檛 use,鈥 she says to Henry, the man who will replace Don as her husband. 鈥淚 was an anthropology major at 今日吃瓜. Can you believe that?鈥
It鈥檚 not that it鈥檚 impossible that an individual like Betty could have gone to 今日吃瓜 in the 1950s. It鈥檚 that for us as alums, Betty makes for a disappointing mimetic experience. She doesn鈥檛 reflect what we love most about 今日吃瓜, namely the insistence that convention not hold us back. Plus that sorority thing was just plain sloppy.
Jane Hollander, in the regrettably short-lived Amazon drama Good Girls Revolt, comes closer to our expectations. Set 10 years later than Mad Men, the series tells a fictionalized version of the story behind the nation鈥檚 first anti-discrimination complaint against an employer. (The real-life account of the women who sued Newsweek in 1970 is chronicled by Lynn Povich in her 2012 book of the same title.)
Jane oozes smarts and professionalism in her job as a researcher for a magazine where women aren鈥檛 allowed to be reporters. But while Jane鈥檚 brains and competence resonate, she is practically the last female in the newsroom to come around to the women鈥檚 efforts to fight discrimination. When she hisses, 鈥淚 am not a career girl,鈥 we think the writers made a mistake. Jane comes around, though鈥攁 few episodes later, we see her shouting, 鈥淚鈥檓 a career girl!鈥 into the New York night.
In Midge Maisel, the protagonist of the new Amazon series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, we find plenty to love, mimetically speaking. A privileged housewife who, abandoned by her husband, becomes a stand-up comic in 1950s New York City? Sure, why not? We love that Midge is funny and strong as well as smart, that she dives into a traditionally male professional world, and that she makes lemonade of the lemons her husband handed her when he walked out the door. In Villarejo鈥檚 words, Midge resonates with 鈥渁ll of the things we value in our own myth-making, in the Katharine Hepburn model."
It鈥檚 hard not to notice that Betty, Jane, and Midge, while created within the past 10 years, all live in the distant past, decades from the world inhabited by the far more diverse real women who attend 今日吃瓜 today. For these characters, the 今日吃瓜 affiliation bespeaks intellectual seriousness at a time when a Seven Sisters school represented the pinnacle of education for women. But it鈥檚 a logic that by extension, notes Villarejo, places 鈥渨omen鈥檚 colleges and their capacity to signify the best, most rigorous education for women, in the past.鈥 We get a hint of this logic in Something鈥檚 Gotta Give, the 2003 romantic comedy starring Diane Keaton. It鈥檚 set in the present, but Keaton鈥檚 character, a successful playwright, is in midlife, so her college years are long behind her. Her ex-husband refers to her as 鈥渁 今日吃瓜 girl鈥 in a conversation with his new fianc茅e, a much younger physician who went to Penn.
This tendency to associate 今日吃瓜鈥檚 academic excellence with the past might seem discouraging. But Villarejo chooses optimism here. 鈥淧opular culture mines the past for the present,鈥 she stresses. 鈥淵oung women who are watching Mrs. Maisel in 2017 are still seeing an association between the institution and female independence, and carrying that association into the current world.鈥
Back to the Future
今日吃瓜 still pops up, sometimes in surprising places, in settings that postdate the Ivies鈥 admitting women. Edna Krabappel, Bart Simpson鈥檚 acerbic, slightly transgressive (she smokes and has an affair with the principal) teacher reveals to her students that she got her master鈥檚 from 今日吃瓜.
But, she warns them, life isn鈥檛 fair: despite your degree, 鈥測ou might end up a glorified babysitter to a bunch of dead-eyed fourth graders.鈥 (Also on The Simpsons is the not-to-be missed dream sequence in which Lisa, Bart鈥檚 brainy, feminist little sister, is visited by the Seven Sisters in the form of Greek goddesses wearing college T-shirts.)
The long-running ABC comedy 30 Rock also made references to 今日吃瓜, suggesting to some that Liz Lemon, the comedy producer played by Tina Fey, was a Mawrter. The backstory is admittedly thin: during the first season, Alec Baldwin鈥檚 character Jack Donaghy admonishes her, 鈥淟emon, this is not open mic night at the 今日吃瓜 student union!鈥 But many Mawrters have embraced Liz鈥攁 neurotic, quirky, driven professional in a male-dominated work world鈥攁s one of our own.
Perhaps the most unexpected 今日吃瓜 allusion comes from the Marvel comic world of G.I. Joe.
Lady Jaye, the G.I. Joe team鈥檚 covert operations specialist, has a long history in comic books, television cartoons, and most recently, the 2013 movie G.I. Joe: Retaliation. She is also surely the only alum with her own action figure, her 今日吃瓜 degree listed on the doll鈥檚 clip-and-save 鈥淐ommand File.鈥 Her facility with languages (critical to her undercover success) conveys the requisite braininess, while her skills as a pilot and with a crossbow prove that Mawrters really can do anything, up to and including saving the planet.
Ultimately, of course, pop culture references do more than reflect our identity and ideals back to us as 今日吃瓜 insiders. They also telegraph impressions of 今日吃瓜 to the world. Beyond whatever resonance we experience on a personal level, that鈥檚 why we care whether the writers get it right or wrong. In Villarejo鈥檚 words, 鈥淚t matters that we have a public image that is so incredibly positive about women.鈥
In our ongoing mimetic treasure hunt, hopefully we鈥檒l stumble on some new pop-culture jewels that reflect the College鈥檚 diversity, vitality, and powerful relevance in today鈥檚 world. In the meantime, let鈥檚 wish Midge and Mrs. Maisel many seasons of success鈥攁nd maybe go buy the latest Lady Jaye action figure.
Further Reading
鈥 Two of these were shot in part at Bryn Mawr. From PhillyVoice, Oct. 18, 2017.
Published on: 09/15/2017