Analysis of the most popular locally made soap operas in each of five
European countries reveals that the soap opera is not simply an import
ed American genre. The study of British, Scandinavian and European soa
ps, based on an 'ethnographic' approach to the social networks in the
world of the soaps, shows that these countries have developed three di
stinctive subtypes of the genre: the community soap, the dynastic soap
and the dyadic soap. For each of these subtypes, the article analyses
the gender and class context for narrative events as portrayed within
the soaps. While the kinship structure in both the dynastic (or patri
archal) and the community soaps constitutes a hegemonic, taken for gra
nted framework for the programmes, the community soaps tend to be prod
uced in the spirit of public service broadcasting and so are more like
ly to problematize gender issues in their conscious attempt to transmi
t social messages. The dyadic form appears to be taking over in the 19
90s, harping on the modern and postmodern despair of too much freedom
and too little trust. It operates in a destabilized environment, in wh
ich families have more or less disappeared, romantic dyads cannot be s
ustained, and women's quest for enduring ties takes the form of seekin
g primordial, biological, 'genuine', blood ties.