Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison . Translated by Alan Sheridan, Vintage Books, 1995.
In the ecology of young adult thrillers, the secret is the central organism. Sara Shepard’s Flawless opens with an implicit understanding: the four protagonists survived the disappearance of their queen bee, Alison DiLaurentis, but they did not survive her legacy. Building directly on the revelation that “A”—an anonymous texter who knows their every lie—is still hunting them, Book 2 deepens the series’ central thesis: in an environment of extreme social scrutiny, the most dangerous predator is not a single stalker but the compulsion to appear perfect. This paper dissects how Flawless transforms the thriller genre into a mirror reflecting the anxieties of adolescent girlhood under surveillance. pretty little liars book 2
Talley, Heather Laine. “Girls Gone Skank: The Sexualization of Girls in American Culture.” Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy , vol. 54, no. 4, 2010, pp. 294–296. (Applied to analysis of Aria’s relationship with Ezra) Foucault, Michel
Gill, Rosalind. “Postfeminist Media Culture: Elements of a Sensibility.” European Journal of Cultural Studies , vol. 10, no. 2, 2007, pp. 147–166. (Applied to analysis of Hanna’s body commodification) In the ecology of young adult thrillers, the
A recurring structural element in Flawless is the incompetence or complicity of adults. Parents are either absent (Hanna’s workaholic father), vain (Aria’s cheating mother), or actively hostile (Spencer’s status-obsessed parents). The Rosewood police dismiss the “A” texts as teenage pranks. Mr. Fitz, the adult in the illicit relationship, continues to gaslight Aria.
Shepard thus constructs a world where girls are forced to become forensic detectives of their own lives. No adult can solve the mystery of Alison’s murder or the identity of “A” because adults are either the source of the secrets (e.g., Spencer’s father’s affair) or willfully blind. The novel posits that adolescent secrecy is a rational response to a caregiving vacuum. The Liars do not lie because they are pathological; they lie because telling the truth would dismantle the fragile architecture their families have built.