Heartland TV: Prime Time Television and the Struggle for U.S. Identity

앞표지
NYU Press, 2008 - 262페이지

Winner of the 2009 Society for Cinema and Media Studies Katherine Singer Kovacs Book Award
The Midwest of popular imagination is a "Heartland" characterized by traditional cultural values and mass market dispositions. Whether cast positively —; as authentic, pastoral, populist, hardworking, and all-American—or negatively—as backward, narrow–minded, unsophisticated, conservative, and out-of-touch—the myth of the Heartland endures.
Heartland TV examines the centrality of this myth to television's promotion and development, programming and marketing appeals, and public debates over the medium's and its audience's cultural worth. Victoria E. Johnson investigates how the "square" image of the heartland has been ritually recuperated on prime time television, from The Lawrence Welk Show in the 1950s, to documentary specials in the 1960s, to The Mary Tyler Moore Show in the 1970s, to Ellen in the 1990s. She also examines news specials on the Oklahoma City bombing to reveal how that city has been inscribed as the epitome of a timeless, pastoral heartland, and concludes with an analysis of network branding practices and appeals to an imagined "red state" audience.
Johnson argues that non-white, queer, and urban culture is consistently erased from depictions of the Midwest in order to reinforce its "reassuring" image as white and straight. Through analyses of policy, industry discourse, and case studies of specific shows, Heartland TV exposes the cultural function of the Midwest as a site of national transference and disavowal with regard to race, sexuality, and citizenship ideals.

도서 본문에서

목차

Johnson_pp001031_1_1
1
Johnson_pp032058_1_1
32
Johnson_pp059088_1_1
59
Johnson_pp089111_1_1
89
Johnson_pp112146_1_1
112
Johnson_pp147173_1_1
147
Johnson_pp174199_1_1
174
Johnson_pp200210_1_1
200
Johnson_pp211242_1_1
211
Johnson_pp243261_1_1
243
Johnson_pp262_1_1
262
저작권

기타 출판본 - 모두 보기

자주 나오는 단어 및 구문

저자 정보 (2008)

Victoria E. Johnson is Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Irvine, and she is also the President-Elect of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies (2021-2023). She is the author of Heartland TV: Prime Time Television and the Struggle for U.S. Identity (2008) and Sports Television (2021).

도서 문헌정보