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The Sitcom Reader, Second Edition: America Re-viewed, Still Skewed
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Barnes and Noble
The Sitcom Reader, Second Edition: America Re-viewed, Still Skewed
Current price: $95.00
Barnes and Noble
The Sitcom Reader, Second Edition: America Re-viewed, Still Skewed
Current price: $95.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Updated version of an engaging overview of the television situation comedy.
This updated and expanded anthology offers an engaging overview of one of the oldest and most ubiquitous forms of television programming: the sitcom. Through an analysis of formulaic conventions, the contributors address critical identities such as race, gender, and sexuality, and overarching structures such as class and family. Organized by decade, chapters explore postwar domestic ideology and working-class masculinity in the 1950s, the competing messages of power and subordination in 1960s magicoms, liberated women and gender in 1970s workplace comedies and 1980s domestic comedies, liberal feminism in the 1990s, heteronormative narrative strategies in the 2000s, and unmasking myths of gender in the 2010s. From
I Love Lucy
and
The Honeymooners
to
Roseanne
,
Cybill
, and
Will & Grace
Transparent
and many others in between,
The Sitcom Reader
provides a comprehensive examination of this popular genre that will help readers think about the shows and themselves in new contexts.
For access to an online resource created by Mary Dalton, which includes interviews with contributors and course lectures, visit:
: A Companion Website @ https://build.zsr.wfu.edu/sitcomreader
This updated and expanded anthology offers an engaging overview of one of the oldest and most ubiquitous forms of television programming: the sitcom. Through an analysis of formulaic conventions, the contributors address critical identities such as race, gender, and sexuality, and overarching structures such as class and family. Organized by decade, chapters explore postwar domestic ideology and working-class masculinity in the 1950s, the competing messages of power and subordination in 1960s magicoms, liberated women and gender in 1970s workplace comedies and 1980s domestic comedies, liberal feminism in the 1990s, heteronormative narrative strategies in the 2000s, and unmasking myths of gender in the 2010s. From
I Love Lucy
and
The Honeymooners
to
Roseanne
,
Cybill
, and
Will & Grace
Transparent
and many others in between,
The Sitcom Reader
provides a comprehensive examination of this popular genre that will help readers think about the shows and themselves in new contexts.
For access to an online resource created by Mary Dalton, which includes interviews with contributors and course lectures, visit:
: A Companion Website @ https://build.zsr.wfu.edu/sitcomreader