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Even the most casual observer of recent popular culture is well aware of the phenomenon of the sex-saturated innocence of celebrity girl singers. They are but recent examples of the evocative relationship between young women and sexuality in pop music in the second half of the twentieth century. Young female singers in France in the 1960s-called copines, perhaps best translated "gal pals"-were similarly thrust into the spotlight with the growing popularity of rock and roll, and sexual suggestiveness often accompanied their success. Like their modern-day parallels, the copines were caught in a web consisting of the social limitations of their age and sex, the moral expectations concerning female adolescence, and the special freedoms their commercial success afforded. This web was anchored within a culture of new sexual expectations in which young people were to be sexy without being sexual.1 Popular music was sexually threatening in the postwar period, and the tension between the image of the copines as being both innocent and sexual reveals the broader tensions created by the transformation in social and sexual attitudes in France during the 1960s as part of what historians have termed "the long sexual revolution." While for young men, popular music provided an opportunity to redefine sexual norms, music produced and performed by young women did little to challenge and often reinforced such norms, underscoring the importance of gender in dictating and defining the experiences and character of the long sexual revolution during the 1960s. The history, reception, and aesthetics of commercially successful music recorded by young women between 1960 and 1965 illustrates how the long sexual revolution operated in gendered registers in the cultural expression of sexuality.
The "sexual revolution," the transformation of sexuality and its appearance in the public sphere in the 1970s, has often been seen as part of a global change in sexual behaviors, one aspect of the general challenges young people made to social values in the Western world. Although the sexual revolution is linked in popular memory, especially in France, to the student protests that took place in 1968, scholars, among them Arthur Marwick, Hera Cook, Michael Seidman, and Dagmar Herzog, have recently asserted the more convincing notion of a "long sexual revolution" rather than any single watershed moment in the history...